GEORGETOWN ALUMNI CLUB ROSTER Officers of local and regional Georgetown Alumni Clubs are listed here as a regular feature of the ALUMNI MAGAZINE. Club Secretaries are requested to notify the Executive Secretary of the Alumni Association of any changes as soon as they occur. Pres.: Los Angeles, Calif. Donald J. O'Leary, '52, 3440 Wilshire Blvd .. Los Angde,;, Calif. Northern California Alvin M. Lesser, '41, 54 Beld en St. , San Francisco 4. Calif. YUkon 6·0292 Denver, Colo. Pres. : Charles P . Gallagher, '49, Central Bank, Denver, Colo. AC 2-0771 Connecticut Pres.: Harry H. Hefferan, Jr., '48, National Bank Bldg., Norwalk, Conn. Delaware Pres.: Aubrey B. Lank, '51, Logan, Marvel, Boggs and Theison, Wilmington, Del. Secy.: Charles F. Daley, Jr., Daley & Lewis, Odd Fellows Bldg., Wilmington, Del. Pres.: Washington, D. C. Pres.: Dr. Raymond A. Osbourn, '33. 1835 Eye St .. N.W .. Washin gton, D. C. RE. 7-4600. Pres.: Florida Irving M. Wolff. '45, BiSC'ay ne Building, Miami, Fla. Chicago, Ill. ' 3~. 135 Sotrth La Salle St., Chi cago Pres.: George D. Crowley, 3, Ill. Washington Blvd., Annapolis, Md. T emp. Secy.: Robert H. Whitman, '52, 100 Chesapeake St., Annapolis, Md . Pres.: Boston, Mass. Francis L. Swift , '46, Suite 527, 11 Beaton St. , Boston 8, Mass. Secy.: E. Che;ter Bro\\ne. '40, 184 Boylston St., Boston, :\lass. Pres.: Springfield, Mass. Raymond Larrow, '49, 352 Pleasant St .. Holyok e, ~lass . Detroit, Mich. Pres.: Walter R. Howell, Jr .. C '54, General Underwri ters, Inc., Buhl Bui lding, Detroit 26, ~li c h ., WOodward 3-5240. Pres.: Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn. Robert C. Drake, '50, 1707 West 26th Street, ~linn ea]Joli s, Minn. Seq.: William LaHiff, '45, 2513 Foshay Tower, Minnea polis 2, Minn. Kansas City, Mo. Pres.: Robert I. Donnellan, FS '50, 1500 Hom e Savings Building, Kansa s City, !\lo. Secy.: Roger J. Walsh, L '50. 320 Un ion Bank Building, Kan sas City, :\lo. St. Louis, Mo. J . Vernon McCarthy, '51, Edward D. Jon es and Co., 300 North 4th St .. St. Louis, Mo. CEn tral 1-7600 Pres.: Trenton, N. J, Pres.: John A. Waldron, '38, 28 Wost State St., Trenton, N. J . EXport 3-3044 Albuquerque, N. Mex. Pres.: John B. !\lel\lanus, '47. 2734 Hyden Drive, Albuque rque, N. :\1ex. 3-2021 Northeastern, N. Y. Pres.: Dr. Ernest Beaudoin, '54, 67 Ch estnut St., Albany, N. Y. Secy. : Jay F. MacNulty, '58, 143 Pawling Ave., Troy, N.Y. Binghamton, N. Y. Dr. Jeremia h E. Ryan, '38, 107 Murray St., Binghamton, N. Y. 3-6161 Secy.: Pres.: Mid-Hudson Valley, N. Y. John J. Gartland, Jr., '35, 226 Union St., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Rochester, N. Y. Pres.: Charles P. Maloney, '29, 204-207 Pow ers Building, Rochester 14, N. Y. LOcust 2-4876 Secy.: James J . Lane, '50, 150 Heres ford Rd ., Rochester, N. Y. BUtler 8-1750 Syracuse, N. Y. Pres.: Edward J. Kearney, Jr., '51, 109 Arling ton Ave., Syracuse 7, N. Y. GRan ite 8-7405 Cincinnati, Ohio Pres.: Ra ymo nd L. !1usr. Jr. '48. 1814 Carl'w Town. Cincinnati 2, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Pres.: James \I. '\loon ey. 40.50 S il sby Road , Universit y Height s 18, Ohio Indianapolis, Ind. Pres. : William A. Brennan, Jr., '39, 5732 No . Penn sy lvania St., Indianapolis. Ind. CLifford 1-3542 Seq.: Martin :'llcDermott , II , '54, 9211 Indianapoli s 20, Ind. VIctory 6-2039 Buffalo, N. Y. J ohn F. !\loloney, '49, 20 Duane Terrace, Buffalo, N. Y. Secy.: John H. Napier, '47, 235 Cleve land Drive, Kenmore, N.Y. l:lEdford 1646 ' Metropolitan N. Y. Pres.: Walter B. Sch ubert, '51, 2 Broadway, Ne1,- York, N. Y. Bowling Grrrn 9-2020 Seq .: George Harvey Cain, '42, Ce rro de Pasco Corp., 300 Park Ave., New York 22, N. Y. 1\!Urray Hill 8-8822 Pres.: Secy.: Leo M. Spellacy, '56, 1249 Gill, Lakc11ood 7, Ohio LA l-6268 Toledo, Ohio Sec_r.: Erwi n R. Effier, Jr. , '39, Uni ted Sav in gs Bldg., Tol edo, Ohio Tulsa, Okla. Pres.: J ohn D. Reilly, '31, Box 1260, Tuba, Okla. Secy.: Portland, Ore . George Van Hoomissen, '55, Pacific Building, Portlan~ 4, Ore. Pres.: Erie, Pa. John W. E nglish, '37, 204 West 6th Street, Erie, Pa. Pres.: Philadelphia, Pa. Joseph C. O'Connor, '50, 422 East Spri ng .\ve., Ardmore, Pa. Secy.: John C. Cilhooley, ':19, 1518 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. PE 5-6157 Pittsburgh, Pa. Pres.: J ose]Jh G. Smith, '33, Grant Bldg., P. 0. llox liB, Pitt sburgh 30, Pa. GRant 1-3600 Secy.: Paul R. Obert, '50, 1310 Commonwea lth Building, Pitt s· burgh 22, Pa. ATlantic 1-0776 Rhode I sland Pres.: J ames E. McGwin, '53, 147 West"orth Ave., Edgewood 5, R. I. STuart 1-5676 Richmond, Va. Pres .: F. B. Sitterding, Jr. , '12, P. 0. Box 4 18, Richmond, Va. 5-7697 Seattle, Wash. Pres.: John D. Spellman, '53, 6043 52nd St., N.E., Sea ttl e, Wash. LAview 4-3 144 Mexico City Alexis Rovzar, '39, Eastern Air Lin es Bldg., Mexico, D. F., Mexico Puerto Rico Pres. : Manue l F. Igles ias. '42, P. 0. Box 6412 Loiza tation. Sa nturce, Pu er to Ri co Se cy.: Dr. Roberto Francisc·o, '39, San Juan Diagnostic Clini c, Sa nturce, Puerto Ri co 2-5980 Pres.: Canada Harry 0. Trihey, '38, 358 Grenfe ll Ave., Town of Mo unt Royal , Montreal. P.Q., Canada REgent 8-6012 Pres.: MARCH 1960/VOLUM~~z._ NUMBER 6 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN ALUMNI COUNCIL EDITORIAL BOARD TABLE OF CONTENTS: OF ALUMNI MAGAZINE Edwin W. Beitzel! , '28 Father Lucey' s Golden Jubilee .... ..... ... .... . Edward M. Castle, '40 Ford study indicates parents neglect l eo A. Codd, '22 John Robert Ewers, '57 College fund for children ...... ........ . 4 9 Rev. Daniel E. Powe r, S.J. Georgetown' s Rhodes Scholar ...... .. .. .. .. .. .............. . II Dr. James S. Ruby, '27, Editor Ten sq uare blocks of charm ..... ... .. .. .... .. 13 Cla ss Notes ....... ... ....... . 14 Dr. John Waldron, '30 Ruth Ketterman, Advertising Manager NOTE ON THE COVER PIC- Contributors to this issue: H e n. E. Barrett Prettyma n, '1 5, C hief J udg e of the United States Court o f Appeals for the District of Columbia C ircuit Edward F. Kearney, '57 , Regist e red Representative of Bi rely a nd Co., W ash ington, D. C . Be rnard Kolash, free-lance writer of Newark, N. J. at the Testimonial Dinner /or Rev. Fran cis E. Lucey, SJ., in celebration of his fifty years as a ] esuit and thirty years as Regent o/ the Georgetown Law Center. The able chairman o/ the Dinner, William S. Abell, '36, sits behind Father Lucey. Th e dinner was served in New South Hall on the campus and was attended by BOO Alumni and friends of the honoree. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE: published each two months by the Georgetown University Alumni Association, Inc., Wash ington 7, D. C. • Sustaining Membership $25.00 per year, Regular Membership $5.00 per year, of which $3.00 is for subscription to the Alumni Magaz ine. • Second Class Postage paid at Washington, D. C. • Editorial and Executive offices : GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Alumni House, 3604 0 Street, N.W., Washington 7, D. C. RETURN POSTAGE GUARANTEED COPYRIGHT 1960 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY AlUMNI MAGAZINE I F' REMARKS BY THE HONORABLE E. BARRETT PRETTYMAN '15 UPON THE OCCASION OF FATHER LUCEY'S GOLDEN JUBILEE JANUARY 28, 1960 AT GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Pleasant it is to pay tribute to a man whom one admires. More pleasant it is when the substance of the tribute is not only the sweet, thin incense of personal affection but the solid substance of character and service and achievement. Most pleasant it is when the subj ect of the tribute is not in the past, to be recalled from down the corridors of memory, but is present, living, expectant, bright-eyed-half embarrassed, half puzzled, but withal thoroughly pleased. As we of the Class of 1915, in our customary scholarl y fashion, would put it: Officium gratum, officium gratius, officiwn gratissimum. Such is my privilege tonight. 4 The first scene of our story is laid at Malden, Massachusetts, a modest residential town some half-dozen miles north of Boston. In the year 1891; the month is August; the day is the 2nd. It is Sunday, hot and rainy. The feast of St. Igna tius Loyola, customarily celebrated on the 31st of Jul y, has been postponed to the 2nd of August. On Boston Common in the midst of afternoon showers some fifteen thousand people watch the Boston Hurling Team outhurl the O'Briens, to the discomfort of all proper Irish Bostonians. Amid all these portents a male ch ild was born to J eremiah and Hannah Lucey, the former over fr om the County Cork and the latter from county Kilkenny. The father was a building con tractor, and the new baby was the fourth of .a family which eventuall y totaled eight children. They named him Francis Edmund. This youngster's schoolin g began in the public schools of Malden. Then at age 10 he went west to visit his uncle, the Reverend Patrick Lucey, who was the parish priest at De Graffe, Minnesota. The visit lasted five years. The formal part of Francis's ed ucation continued at Waverly Academy, a parochial hi gh school, but ncle Pat and his maiden sister, Kate, who kept house for him, added some touches of their own. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Sure and idleness was no good for man or lad, for it is the devil as we know who finds use for unbusy hands. So the boy learned to drive his uncle· about with horse and buggy on pastoral calls in Minnesota snow, and in Minnesota prairie heat, and on sick calls at all hours. He learned to play the piano and became an accomplished violinist, a proficiency which stood him in good stead when later he began to organize and lead jazz bands. Sure indeed, also, 'twas better that a garcon early learn that he must earn his leisure and hi s pleasures, and so young Lucey acquired the means to meet his boyish needs by trapping mink and muskrat on Minnesota streams and lakes, not a business for the lazy or the chi ckenhearted. At age 15 he came back home and continued his schooling at Boston College High School. This Frankie was indeed a tough ' un from the beginning. In Boston he earned his spending money working Saturdays and vacations as a butcher boy. Where? In Faneuil Hall Meat Market, no less-the Cradle of Liberty! And he took ori wrestling as a sport. But, although he had the brawn and the brains of a wrestler, there was not enough meat on him for top-flight competition. So he was not too good at it. But he won a gold medal for scholarship at hi gh school, was valedictorian of his class of 414 boys, organized and directed several jazz orchestras and later a ch urch orchestra, then founded a college hockey team , and took some turns at dramatics. But alwa ys, from the ea rli est his famil y remembers, thi s boy had his heart and mind fixed upon a religious life in the Jesuit Order. He entered the novitiate at age 18, took hi s fir st vows two years later, and in 1923 was ordained in Dahlgren Chapel at Georgetown. His Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees he earned at Woodstock, where he also took hi s theology, and since then a Doctora te of Philosophy and a Bachelor of Laws at Georgetown. He has two LL.D.'s and a J. .D. J-Ie began at once to teach, first at Loyola School, then at Fordham, then at Loyola College in Baltimore, and at Georgetown. He has taught metaphysics, canon law, ethics, the history of social thought, religion, psychology, jurisprudence, civil procedure, torts and legal bibliography. And, as if that were not enough, he has been president of the Jesuit Phil osophical Association of the Eastern States. In some of his many idle minutes he was for a while supervisor of curricula of all the Jesuit colleges in four states and the District of Columbia. In 1939 the law alumni of Ge()rgetown gave him a watch so he could keep track of the time. As has alread y been indicated, our second scene is the District of Columbi a, th e Capital of the Iation. In the yea r 1870, on the hills west of Georgetown and overlooking the P otomac River, lay a university already wellni gh a century old . Her infancy had dated hack to the first settlements on the new continent, when in 1634 a the old city, and chose as her own two colors reminiscent at once of the heroism of her sons in a bitter warfare and of her grief at their fratricidal slaughter. She already boasted a medical school and a graduate school when in 1870 a doctor and two lawyer friends proposed the establishment of a law department. It. was done. The new venture was located downtown in Washington, near Judiciary Square, the homesite of the courts and locale of lawyers. It opened its doors to 25 students, of whom in two years it graduated ten. The new department moved about a bit, as restless youngsters do, until it was 21 years old, but it then settled down at the address we all know so well, and it has never moved again. This is not the time or place to recount a history of Georgetown Law the congratulations af the Supreme Court at his Jubil~e Dinner. (from Fath~r luc~y Hon . Stonley F. Reed (retired), Hon . Tom C. Clark, Father Lucey, Hon. William J. Brennan, Catholic priest in St. Mary's County, Maryland, started a school. That school moved about a couple of times in the original land of pleasant living, and then, when a cen tury and a half after her birth the first Archbishop of Baltimore proposed the establishment of a college, she was moved to the present, and also pleasant, site on the Hilltop and became an academic instituti on. Later she was transferred to the Society of J esus and incorporated by authority of the federal Congress. She took her name from her neighbor, GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE School. Rather let me suggest some of its qualities which contribute to the makeup of it and of the man we are assembled to honor. Georgetown is a place of traditi on. Its roots twine back into the soil of southern Maryland, the Free State, in the very earliest days of that Colony. It boasts on its faculty list a long roster of great names. Four Justices of the Supreme Court taught here, and some thirty of our local judges have done so, among them Shepard, Smyth, Gould , Stafford, O' Donoghue, 5 Hoehling , Adkins, Laws, and a long list of others. Practicing giants of the courtroom have taught here-Da rlington, Hamilton, Baker, Douglas, Perry, Hogan, Easby-Smith, Laskey and many more. And of scholars we have had many-su ch great ones as William J. Hughes, Raleigh Minor, Boutel, Keigwin, and now our own Kronstein and Walter Jaeger. Georgetown has enormous pride in its history. Georgetown is a hardy institution. It has been battered by world wars, by depressions, by competition, by radical changes in economic conditions and modes of living. It has never closed its doors. Since 1891, the year Father Lucey was born , it has not changed its address by so much as one number. It has never been acquired by anybody, nor has it ever acquired anybody else. Overall, despite dips and rough water, it has come from 6 teachers offering 25 students ten courses to more than 50 teachers offering 1200 students 7l courses. Georgetown Law Center as an institution is as tough as the proverbial boot. Georgetown has always had a forward look. In the beginning it was im evening school, and those of us as old as I am look back with affectionate nostalgia to the opportunities it afforded boys who were compelled to earn their keep while struggling for that coveted parchment. The school shifted its schedule as the profession of the law changed its nature. Georgetown imperceptibly abolished the limits of race and sex to admission, so much so, indeed, that a Negro newsman interviewing the Regent was told he would have to view the photos of the students for information, "For you see," said Father Lucey, "we do not inquire of an applicant as to his race." And as to the ladies, one of them has been a most successful Editor-in -Chief of the Law Journal. Georgetown is in the very forefront at the moment with its Institute for the study of Nuclear Energy Law and the Law of Outer Space and a graduate seminar in Atomic Energy and the Law. Georgetown is amply equipped, ideally located- its classrooms, offices, lounges, library (all air-condi6 tioned) , and its collections of prints and pictures all located adjacent to the square laid out in the original plans of the City as the site for the courts, a neighborhood in which the breath of life is the breath of the courts, and of the bench and the bar in actual daily operation. To a Georgetown man a court is not merely a subheading to a case report; judges are not merely characters in short stories published by the West Publishing Company; trials are not merely the background plots sketched briefly in appellate opinions. To a Georgetown man dozens of courtrooms are annexes to his classrooms; judges are human beings who sit in robes, lonely on a bench, who have good days and bad days, who sometimes amazingly dispense justice in hopeless tangles created by hapless other humans and and at other times make incredible errors; trials are living dramas which unfold in calm progression or in passionate outbursts. To a Georgetown man the law is a living performance, the principles of which he learns at school and the operation of which he can watch as much as he pleases. But the great characteristic of the Georgetown Law School is thafit has character. For its entire life it has stood unwaveringly for the proposition that the law arises out of and rests upon a system of morals with which man was endowed by God, his Creator, and which confer upon man inherent rights which are inalienable. Georgetown has never been without a firm grip on the system of principle it teaches its sons. It has never yawed with passing gusts or taught terror by abject outcries of "I don't know." It has never been abashed by those intellectuals who proclaim doubts superior to beliefs and faiths. Georgetown is not an empty shell of facade; it has a foundation. Like the house in the parable, the winds come and the storms beat upon this house but it falls not, because it is built upon a rock. This is the pride of Georgetown. It is not negative, or amorphous, or hollow, or veneered, or merely uncertain or undetermined. It is built upon a foundation; it stands for a thesis. There were, no doubt, as the history of the school tells us, many in the past who played a part in the building of this foundation. But in the minds of us oldsters here toni ght two vivid figures loom large in that respect. One was George E. Hamilton, of the Class of 1874, a member of the faculty from 1886 to 1943 and Dean of the Law School for thirty-three years. When Georgetown celebrated her lOOth Anniversary in 1889, Mr. Hamilton was the one who responded to the toast "The Law School." In our day Mr. Hamilton , inter alia, taught Legal Ethics, and he didn't just teach Ethics, he meant Ethics. He was one of the leaders of the local bar, a successful practitioner. And he didn't mean Ethics as a mere classroom exercise; he meant it as one of the inflexible rules of a lawyer's life at the bar. With all his gracious courtesy Mr. Hamilton was a rugged character, and we all had a definite notion that what he meant, he meant. Then there was gentle, beloved Hugh Fegan. Here was a truly dedicated scholar. I borrow a sentence: "He was the Mr. Chips of Georgetown , a grand intellect with a great heart." Whenever Georgetown men meet to celebrate the Law School, they must include in their toasts a mighty one to those two. In the early 1930's the central character in our first scene and the institution in our second scene came together, became intertwined, and each became part of the other. Francis Edmund Lucey became Regent of the Georgetown Law School in 1931. Th e School progressed into a Center. It became not merely a place of learning law but a mode of living the law. The student body increased , and students moved into dormitories to live at the Center. The faculty increased in -number and in strength. The curriculum took on the new phases of law born of new economics, new business, new industry , new science. The library grew. Student activities multiplied. To the Journal and the moot courts were added legal aid, continuing education, retreats, actual aid to lawyers appointed by the courts in defense of indigents, a bar association. Father Lucey carried on the great tradition ; he not only maintain ed it, he moved it forward into this vast new era in which we now live. He GEORGETOWN UNI VERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZ INE was trained and originally destined for a life of scholarship, but his financial genius has been responsible for the phenomenal growth of the institution in his charge. P erhaps chief among his characteristics as an administrator have been his unremitting determination to look always ahead and his persistent initiative in raising the standards of Georgetown to a notch or two above those of the other leaders in legal education . His have been the vision of a prophet, the zeal of an apostle, the prudence of a bishop. Apart fr om his manifold duties as Regent of the Law Center , but standing upon the same foundation which supports Georgetown, Father Lucey has in recent years engaged in another maj or undertaking. He has challenged the mighty cult of Oliver Wendell Holmes. Seemingly alone at first in this impertinent audacity, our good Father n ow finds himself surrounded by a myriad of like-minded but less reckless souls who were apparently merely waiting for somebody to blow the bugle. Mr. Justice Holmes was, of co urse, a great justice and a great lawyer in man y fields of the law, a great phrasemaker ; also he was strikingly handsome, and he lived a great many years. Undoubtedl y also, his position and vote on the controversies befor e the Court were in the main sound and far-seeing. In none of those areas would anyone dispute the earnest proclaiming of his followers that he was great. But the magnetism of his virtues has drawn men into the orbit of his philosoph y. The tide of the cult has threatened to engulf the whole of our profession. The area in which Father Lucey would do battle is in the philosophy which undergird and overlay all the 01 ympi an Yankee did or said or thought. This is not the time or place for a catalog of the Holmesian tenets. Suffice it fo r our purposes to say that Father Lucey, h aving read all that Mr. Justice Holmes wrote, r eaches emphatic conclusions supported by quotations from those wntmgs. Holmes's underl ying bases, says Fath er Lucey, were ag nostic, materiali stic ; they included propositions that no significance is to be attri buted to a human being, different in kind from that to be attributed to a baboon or a grain of sand ; that law is the current will of the domin ant power ; that rights are the whi m of the dominan t power ; that truth is merely the road one can' t help fo llowing; that " I can't help" is the ultim ate; that the sacredness of human life is a purely municipal ideal of no validity outside the j urisdiction. Having thus assayed the philosophy of the Great Dissenter, with, as I have said , copious notations of quotations, Father Lucey moves in to the attack. And here, I suggest to yo u, his voice is the voice of Georgetown. This is the bedrock upon which our Law School was founded, and upon which it operates. Without inquiry or statistical pr oof I venture to say that when I phrase my own views on this fundamental, I refl ect the views of the men of Georgetown. If there is a bit of space left somewhere in the ranks of yo ur supporters, Father Lucey, where a small fi gure might squeeze in , I would like to occup y it. My father taught me, in many discussions, what he summed up in a terse sentence : "This is a moral universe." And he often elaborated on that theme with man y variations. I am content to take my place alongside yo u and him. But more than that, with increasing certainty as I emerged fr om the bravado of adolescence, slogged my way through the mires of middle age reali sms, and came into the bracing air of r elaxed elderl y contemplation, I have become more and more convinced of th at premise which is basic with my father and yo u. A Creator, God, who is the Father of all mankind, is the onl y basic thesis that makes sense to my mind. The concept of an Intellect of the Universe is, of course, mysteriousas mysterious, perhaps, as eternity, or as space measured in millions of light years, or as the precision mechani sm of a gnat's eye, or as the transmission of this very thought from my mi nd to yo urs. But, even though not understandable, such a concept is believeable. The alternative concept, that all nature, all matter, all life, with its movements and colors, its h opes, its fears, its comings and goings, just GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE happened without initial impulse or plan or purpose, is utterl y unbeli evable. I can believe the one, and it makes sense to my mind; I cannot believe the other, for to me it is impossible of belief. And a code of moral law, inherent in the nature of man, implicit in the Fatherhood of God, is the onl y subsidiary thesis which expl ain s conditions plainly observable by my senses. Moreover, if those two theses be not true, then certain! y much that we are doing, or trying to do, in this world makes no sense at all. If Holmes was right I see no purpose in an y of it ; and of course there wo uld be no purpose- ever ything would be merely happenstance. If there is no Fatherhood of God or brotherh ood of man, if man indeed is merely an a nima ted lump of mud or a super ape, if rights are only the concessions of the powerful and law is the whim of the mi ghty, I see little or no rationale in any of the whole business. If I beli eved in the philosophical musings of Mr. Justice Holmes, I would see no reason wh y we of the fit majority should not breed fit compatriots and sterilize the unfit as we do prize cattle; or why we should ed ucate the uneducated or civilize the uncivilized; or wh y the mighty in any area should not slaughter the meek, the few, the weak. If no ri ghts are absolute and all morals are but soluble customs, I would certainly rid myself of the restraints of decency, the so-called obligations of parenthood and citizenship, and would attach myself to the banners of some outstanding force who could lead me to the lush and the enj oyable. No, Father, in yo ur current joustings yo u are the champi on of all we hold precious ; the faith to whi ch we tie, the stars by which we guide, the sweet, the certain , the satisfying in life, and that destiny which is the destin y of all of us. We of Georgetown are proud that our alma mater has furnished you the forum and some of the weapons for the battle. I do not argue Father Lucey's position for him . I merely point out that he speaks on these subj ects in tones that harmonize with the choirs of Georgetown. I like the music of those choirs, and I think all of us 7 here do. Father Lucey, in August of the year 1891 there were fiv e Sundays. You were born on the first one. I was born on the fourth one. Therefore, as a yo unger man- by three weeks- speakin g with deference and respect to his elder, I congratulate yo u on this anniversary and wish for yo u man y more such. I propose that yo u and I drink a toast de Se neclule. Here's to Malden, Mass., and Lexing- ton, Virgini a; to the year 1891 and the month of August therein ; to fri endship and fri ends; to the law ; and here's to Georgetown! Let's make your 100th anni versary a dill y! On February 19 at the Spanish Embassy, His Excellency the Spanish Ambassador, Count of Motrico, on behalf of his government decorated two members of the Georgetown faculty. From the left: Professor Domingo Caino de Cancio of the School of Languages and Linguistics, Commander of the Order of Civil Merit; The Count of Motrico; Rev. Frank Fadner, S.J., Regent of the School of Foreign Service, Commander of the Order of Isabel Ia Catolica. WHEN YOU BUY MILK GET THE BEST---GET Call AD 2-1011 for convenient home delivery, or choose Sealtesl Mille in food stores. WHAT'S IT ALL ABOUT? TOUR OF EUROPE - 70 DAYS From N. Y. C.-June 8-on the Conto Biancamano Arrive N. Y. C.-August 15-on the Leonardo Lavinci from Naples TRAVEL HOTELS-Luxury and First Class Breakfast and Dinner Price-all included- $1598. Reservations-only 20 places To Europe via the Italian Line By Plane to Lisbon, Madrid Paris, London Amsterdam By Train elsewhere For Further Information YOU'RE OFF TO A WEEK IN Spain-Portugal Paris-london Munich-Rome 8 TIME IN Lisen-Amsterdam Venice-Milan-Zurich Florence-Naples CONTACT Rev. Samuel R. Pitts, S.J. Georgetown University Washington 7, D. C. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE by EDWARD F. KEARNEY, LL.B., '57. FORD STUDY INDICATES PARENTS NEGLECT COLLEGE FUND FOR CHILDREN Mr. Keantey is an Attontey· Adviser with Housin g and Home Finance Agency and a Registered Representative of the investment banking aml stocks brokerage house of Birely and Company, in Washington, D. C. Few parents co mprehend the possible future increased cost of a college educati on and even fewer parents have an adequate plan to finan ce their children's college educations accordin g to a recent Ford Foundation Stud y entitled " Parents' College Plans Stud y" {hereinafter referred to as the F ord Survey) . The Ford Survey, which was conducted during the week of April 5, 1959, involved a cr oss-section sampling of 5,011 heads of fa milies having 6,295 children under eighteen years of age who were not then attending a college or university. Results of the Survey indicate that, on an average, parents expect 70 % {4451/ 6295) of their children to attend college but th at 60 % of the parents questioned who expected a child to attend college had no fin ancial pl an established to meet educati onal expenses. As to the 40% of the heads of households who answered that they both expected to send at least one child to college and who had established a specific pl an to finance the expenses involved, the median amount set aside las t year was a mere $150.00. Parents cl assified as being in a " hi gh economic level" {as defin ed below in Table I), however, saved a medi an of $670; th ose in an " above average economic level," $230 ; those in an "aver age economic level," $130 ; and those in a " below aver age economic level," under $100. Although half of the parents questioned had no definite idea of how much a college educati on costs, the other half th ough t that one year at college would involve a total outlay of fr om $1075 to $1950 per year, according to the respondent's economi c level, or a median of all r espondents of $1450 per year. Since parents, according to the Survey, expect to pay 70% of their children's college costs, it is significant to note that at the medi an rate of $150 per year it would take at least ten years to save enough to fin ance one year at college assuming the cost of going to college should remain constan t and assuming the cost estima te is correct. According to the Ford Sur vey, the total amount a nti cipated fo r coll ege expenses per famil y ranged from $7,800 among fa milies in a " below average economic level" to $15,875 among families in a "high economi c level. " The medi an cost of all estimates was $10,000. 52% of the children who would attend apparentl y would be expected by their parents to go for four years, 4 % wo uld stud y fo r post-graduate degrees, 9 % would take a two -year course and 35% did not know. If the median esti mate of total child's college costs by setting aside $150 a year, it wo uld take more than several decades to accumulate an adequate finan cial positi on to enable parents to contribute what they expect to fr om savings alone. Th e Sur vey GEORGETOWN UNIVER SITY ALUMN I MAGAZINE further revealed that th ree out of fi ve parents definitely expect to di p i nto savings to contribute their share of the costs of going to college. In addition, answers to questi ons co ntained in the Ford Sur vey i ndica te quite positively that pare nts expect the futu re costs of a coll ege ed uca ti on to remain the same as they are now. Wh y parents believe thi s in view of the fac t that prices of food, goo ds and services alone have i ncreased 25.5% since 1949 while the cost of tui tion at many colleges and uni versities has more than doubled d uring the same period of ti me is difficul t to explain . Certainly every indication at the presen t time is that the cost of going to college will increase. Economic laws of supply and demand alone would seem to augur ill for th ose who hope to see the cost of attending college diminish or r emain constant. Vast capital outlays for expansion of college fa cilities and i ncreased salaries are two important fac tors th at will probably cause tuition to be increased in the next ten to fift een years, a nd it may weii be that tuition costs will continue to increase a t a much greater rate than the general cost of. livin g index. There is, of co urse, no consolation to parents in kn owing that the cost of living index has increased 25% while the tuiti on at many colleges has increased at least 100 % 111 the last ten years, since the cost of li ving index serves as a stand ard to judge the effect of the increase in non-tuiti on costs of atte nding coll ege such as r oom, board, clothing, med ical and other mi scell aneous expenses. The di scussion at thi s p oin t has as- 9 sumed that a student would attend college for four years. Should he be required to attend for five years or should he desire to stud y for a graduate degree a family's estimate would have to be a good deal hi gher. The Ford Survey also asked the minority (40 % ) of parents who expect a ch ild or children to attend college and who had savings, what type of plan they \\"ere utilizing. The responses were as shown in Tabl e J. The fir st of the two tables indicates an unfortunately heavy reliance on insurance, especia lly among yo un g people, according to the Survey. As the Ford Survey warned, "Many of th ese insurances plans may be in the form of benefit provisions to be used in case of the parent's death rather th an the special college endowment policy." A further anomaly is why many of the respondents in the second table answered that stock TABLE I Analyzed By Economic Levels* Above Below High Average Average Average - -- - --Those who now have a plan Insurance Program Savings account in bank Buying Government bonds Buying Stocks Other Plan 40%"'' 24% 11 % 6% 4% :3% 58% 34% 15 % 10% 10% 8% ---- 51% 31% 14% 8% 8% 5% 38% 23 % 10% 5% 3% 3% 28% 18% 6% 3% 2% "The Ford Survey classified each parent on the basis of his standard of living as shown by his house and other possessions with relation to others in the same area. The median income of all those canvassed was $4,525. Those in a high eco nomic level earned over $10,000 a year; above average, $6,825; average. $4.575; below average, $2,425 . "*Percentages add to more than 4-0% because some respondents had more than one plan. The minority of parents having a finacial plan were next asked what advantages there were to establi shin g a college fund by in vestin g in savi ngs banks. insurance. stocks, and Govern ment bonds. The answers to thi s question were as follows: investments provided both a hi gher return and constituted an inflation hedge but only 4 % (or one in ten) of the avera ge parents and only 10% (or one in six) of the parents categorized as being in a hi gh econo mi c level had invested in common stocks. TABLE II SAvi:-.cs AccouNT Easier-28% Can be used for other things-19% Higher interest-17 % Safety-14% Other-14% JNSUHANCE Regular forced payment- 27 % Death protection features-26 % Discourages cashing in- 21 % Can pay over a long period- 16% OUTDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE 1960 Date STOCKS Higher return-41% Inflation hedge-32 % Money isn' t available as savin gs account-7% Other-14% GovEHX:\IE I'IT BoNDS Easier-30% Safety-26% Discourages cashing in- 19% Better return-9% Other-18 % 10 An interesting contrast may be supplied by reference to a recent survey published by the Boston Fund indicatin g that an average of 57 % of the assets of 47 college endowmen t funds have been invested in common stocks. Three inescapab le conclusions of the above summary of the Ford Foundation Survey are: Parents generall y are not saving enough to assure their children o f a college ed ucati on . Parents have failed to co nsider future increases in the cost of becom ing ed ucated. Parents at all economic levels may not be investing their sav ings proper] y to assure the eco nomic ability t o fin ance a college edu cation. Since close to half of the parents not expecting their children to attend college assigned a lack of money as the reason and since most parents are apparently not adequately planning for the future educa ti on of our Country's children. even in instances where th ey are financially able to, it appears that Americans need to know more abo ut the economics of hi gher ed uca ti on and must adop t a more systema ti c approach to savin g for a college ed uca ti on. A failure of our colleges and universiti es t~ foster proper understanding of the financial problems to be encountered at a parental-indiv idual level as well as those being enco untered and widely publicized at the collegia te level will cause our free en terpri se system of college ed ucati on to fail in its duty to suppl y our Na ti on and the World with the ed ucated talents so badly needed at all levels o[ mental en deavor. Opponent Place April April April April April April 15-Quantico Relays ......... Quantico, Va. 16-Quantico Relays ....... Quantico, Va. 20-V. M. I. & West. Va . . Lexington, Va. 26-D. C. A. A. U............. Maryland Univ. 29-Penn Relays ................Phila., Penna. 30-Penn Relays ................ Phila., Penna. May May May May ?-Maryland & Navy ........ Maryland Univ. 14-0PEN 27-1. C. 4. A's ....................Villanova, Pa. 28-1. C. 4. A's ....................Villanova, Pa. Coach : Elmer "Hap" Hardell GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZ INE GEORGETOWN'S RHODES SCHOLAR By HARRIET GRIFFITHS Star Staff Writer Giard , Georgetown ' s Yard Presid ent ond Rhodes Scholar adjusting freshman ti es in September, 1959. A yo un g man with a traditional Texan's large view of life is George P. Giard, Jr. The 21-year-old senior and president of th e Yard at Georgetown University will be off across the ocean next fall to take up the stud y of law at England's Oxford University. Awarded a coveted Rhodes Scholarship, he plans to spend the next two years and possibly a third stud ying in Britain for the profession of his choice. After a try at the British bar examinati ons, he hopes to return and take an American law degree. A law yer edu cated in Europe and in America will have a distinct advantage in th e wide scope of legal affairs of th e future, George believes. Such infant fields as space law, he says at th e ri sk of und er statement, "will take lawyers interested in civic affairs on a big scale." George is maj oring in philosoph y at Georgetown, not only for its own interest but as a good background for a lawyer. He credits th e honors stud y program he is takin g at Geo rgetown with much of hi s success in winnin g the Rhod es Scholarship. Two of th e important co ncepts of th e course, he explains, are very small classes with top professors, and an emphasis on stud ying from ori gin al texts, rather than textb ooks. George, nicknamed " P epp y," has shown unusual leadership abi lity at the university. He was president of both his sophomore and junior classes. As president of th e Yard , he heads th e college student council. He is the r epresentati ve of the college to outsider s as well as of the . students to th e school administrati on . He presides at athleti c pep ralli es and as master of ceremonies for various events. With the Yard offi ce annexed to his dormitor y room, his suite is a foca l point for students with activity planning assignments or problems. " It's kind of like having your cot in your office," he says. George's voice already is being heard beyond the campus. He is a member of a panel of eight area students holding a seri es of discussions for broadcast overseas by th e Voice of America. A firm advocate of participation in civic affairs, Geo rge says he has tri ed durin g his school years to interest as man y peo ple as possible in student governm ent, and extend the area of student participation. One of his most admired publi c fi gures is a fellow Texan, Senate Majori ty Leader Lynd on Johnson. He also has a deep respect for President Woodrow Wilson "because he brought so much to hi s office." Geor ge's famil y goes back 100 years in Texas, he says, but happenstance made him a " naturalized Texan." He was born in San Francisco while hi s moth er was visiting there. After fini shing at George town , he says, he probabl y will go back to his usual summer job teaching water GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE safety in Dallas before leavin g for England. He believes in takin g the long view of swimming safety, too. It is important to cultivate foresight rath er than merely to act after th e fact, he says. Thi s mea ns being alert for signs of potential trouble before it happens -an obviously un certain swimmer, a bather hu gging the ropes, or a youn gster who jumps into the pool straight from lunch. He looks at his intended legal career in the same light. Foresight, he maintains, comes with a thorou gh backgr ound. He plans to get a good one. BASEBALL SCHEDULE 1960 Date Opponent Place March 28-Univ. of Maine ______________________Home April April April April April April Apri I April Apri I April April !-Syracuse ....................................Home 2-Princeton ________________________________ Home 6-Geo. Washington ...................:.. Home 9-Delaware --------------------------------- Home 11-Bucknell ____________________________________ Home 13-Vermont ____________________________________Home 18-Pittsburgh ________________________________ Home 20-Geo. Washington ______________________ Home 23-Penn State (2) __________________________ Home 28-Maryland --------------------------------- Away 30-Loyola ________________________________________ Home May May May May 5-Maryland ____________________________________ Home 6-American ___________________________________ Away 10-Navy __________________________________________ Away 14-Howard _____________________________________ Home Coach: Tom Nolan 11 GEORGETOWN IN YOUR HOME Georgetown Child's Boston Rocker, in Black and Gold, bearing the Georgetown seal. $12 .95 each. Small shipping charge from Gardner, Mass. Georgetown Cigarette Lighter with the University Seal. $2.50. Georgetown Beer Mug in blue china, with University Seal in Silver. $2.50 each. Set of 6, $12.50. (Not shown) The Georgetown University Alumni Directory, 1957, containing the names of more than 64,000 graduates and former students from 178 1 lhrough the Freshman class of September, 1956. 28,000 living Alumni listed with occupations and addresses. (Not shown) Hitchcock Mirror with scene of the Georgetown Campus in 1832. Pittsburgh Plate Glass. In black with gold trim. $14.95 . Small shipping charge from Gardner, Mass., will be collected. Set of six 10 inch Dinner Plates by Wedgwood of England . Each plate beers a scene . of the Georgetown campus. $19 .95 per set, postpaid. Th e Georgetown Deacon's Bench, in Black and Gold with the University seal. $34.75 each . Small shipping charge from Gardner, Mess. The Georgetown Armchair, with the University Seal in color. $29.75 each. Expressman will collect small shipping charge from Gardner, Mass. Black with gold trim. GEORGETOWN CAR COATS Fine poplin, unlined, with wooden buttons . Sizes 36 to 40 . Each $8.95 Not pictured : Long muffl ers, wool, striped in Blue and Gray . Each $4.50 Th e Georgetow n lad ies' Chair, a Thumb Back Chai r in Black with the University Seal and trim in Gold . $19.95 each . Expressman will collect small shipping charge from Gardner, Mass . TEN SQUARE . CKS OF CHARM ~- I I by BERNARD KOLASH I When the work day ends in the nation's capital, "responsibility" moves out of the great marbled buildings of space and atom harried Washington, and goes home to ten square blocks of charm. Its name-Georgetownembedded serene in the heart of the youthful capital, is but a mere five minute dtive from the White House. What distinguishes it from other antique villages is the accumulation of responsibility represented by those who people it. Many of the men and women who chart the nation's political course, administer to its economy, mold its forei gn policy and shape world opinion, live in its brick and clapboard homes of another era. On Wisconsin Avenue, George· town's Main Street, you may outrun one of the country's most feared newspaper colur~nists for a taxicab. At the drug store you may sip a soda beside a Senator, or jostle against a form er Secretary of State at the grocery store. Walking the tid y brick paved side streets you may pass a Supreme Court Justice, a Cabinet Officer, a retired ambassador, or a business tycoon diverted to Government employ. Georgetown's unique lure is its charm. Wha Chelsea is to London , what Greenwich !Village once was to Manhattan and Montmartre to Paris, Georgetown is to Washington. National figures returning in the evening to Georgetown enjoy a dai ly reunion with history. Here George Washington sat down at Suter's Tavern with the Frenchman Pierre L'f.nfant to plot a new capital city in the woods and swamps to eastward. At the Union Tavern J olm Randolph of Virginia played whist while his will was revised on the night before his duel with Henry Clay. Here, too, passed Washington Irving, Talleyrand, Jerome Bonaparte and John Adams. Thomas Jefferson lived here while Secretary of State. Georgetown not only predates Washington by a half centur y, but during the capital's youth Georgetown overshadowed it as a center of civilization. It was not until the middle of the nineteenth century that Washington began to swell from a small southern village to something like the metropolis it is today. Tourists in Washington are still misinformed by guides that the national capital was GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE placed on the Potomac site because congressmen wanted to be close to Georgetown's taverns. While this is a charming bit of fiction, the fa ct is that the choice of the site was the result of a compromise, in the first years of the Republic, between the 1orth and the South. With the opening of the railroads in the mid-1800's, Georgetown's decline set in. The new capital began to grow and Georgetown's well-to-do moved there in stride with the fashion. By 1850, it lost its reason for being, and by the first World War it w.as little more than a slum. Georgetown's return to glory and elegance is one of those fantasti c real estate stories. It began in the earl y 1920's. Newcomers to Washington discovered the fin e architecture, which laid hidden under the decay of what had come to be considered hovels, and began buying Georgetown houses for a song and restoring them . In the 1930's, the process was accelerated when intellectuals and the artistically minded began to scan the Washington area for an atmosphere in tune with their temperamen t. This they found in Georgetown, and the real estate 13 boom was on. Unbelieveable prices were paid for sites which returned the buyer little more than a ftne Federal facade. In most cases an entirely new house had to be put behind it. The dominent motif is still the salmon-pink brick facade with simple Federal lines and intricate grill hand- rails, but interspersed are homes of peppermint-pink, pale green or offwhite with shutters in a contrasting color. Ivy covered walls, brass door knockers, coach lamps, brick paved sidewalks-these are Georgetown. Although at Christmas carolers still sing under the lampli ghts, and in summer the residents still dine with candelabra on the lawn , there is nothing "small town" about Georgetown. While its residents are apt to be wealthier, paunchier and grayer than the pioneers who "discovered" it some 30 years ago, it has acquired a new importance as a power center at the heart of one of the world's great capitals. 1924 l ay Emanuel, L '24, h as been elected an Associat e Director of th e H ebrew Educational Society. Charles C. Gidney, Jr., FS '24, retired as a Foreign Service Offi cer in August, 1959, alter more than thirty years servi ce abroad. He is General Director for Europe & Near East for the Grain Sorghum Producers As· sociation with headquarter in Rome, Italy. This association is enga ged in market development work for American feed grains in variou s part s of the world. ;/CLASS j NOTES 1913 ]ames A. Walsh, C '13, has a son, James A. Jr., who has joined th e Maryknoll Brothers. Another son, L. Randolph, is in t}le Army. He also ha s two married daugh· ters ~nd eight grandch ildren. 1915 Reunion-June 3 to 6, 1960 Chairman of 45th Reunion- College : John ]. Beatty, Jr., 1157 21st Street, N.W., Washin gton 6, D. C. Chairman of 45th Reunion-Medical School: Dr. W. P. Herbst, Jr., 1801 Eye Street , N.W., Washington, D. C. Cha irm an of 45th Reunion- Law School: Milton W. King, Southern Buildin g, Washin gton 5, D. C. 1916 H. Clyde Holm es, L '16, of En glewood , peri od than any other county judge or surrogate in the history of Steuben County. He also conducts a private law practi ce in Corning in partnership wi th his brother, Ransom. 1920 Reunion-June 2 to 6, 1960 George N. Welch, L '20, is coming along nice ly aft er a heart att ack uffered some wee k ago . He ha s ret ired , aft er 42 years of servi ce as Chi ef Attorn ey for the Veter· an Admini stration in Massachusetts. Chairman of 40th R eunion- College : Thomas A. Dean, 427 W. Randolph Street, Chicago 6, Ill. 1921 Dr. John G. Bowen, L '21, G '33, is co· N. J., has sold his bank interest and r e· tired as Pres ident of the Ed gewat er National Bank. He and Mrs. Holm es expect to spend most of the time traveling and en· joying their leisure. Edmund L. Jones, L '16, was named "Lawyer of The Year" by th e Distri ct of Columbia Bar A sociation recently in r ecog· nition of hi s out standin g service to the people of the community. author of P erry Como's latest r ecording, "f Know What God Ts," based on a poem of th e sa me name writt en by Doctor Bowen four years ago. Dr. Paul E. Kubasko , M '21, was re· elected on November 3, 1959, for th e fifth con secutive ( 4 year term) as Lackawanna County Coron er (Pa.). ]am es ]. Walsh, L '21, was nam ed first assistant to Robert A. Grimes, chairman of th e board of revi ew in Boston's as essing department, by Mayor John F. Coll ins. 1919 Hon . Lewis L. Guarnieri, GL '19, of 1922 f oseph ]. Skorup, Jr., FS '22, ha r etired Warren, Ohio, is the chairman of th e Third Annual Alumni Fund of Th e Catholic Uni· vcrsity of America. George W. Pratt, L '19, of Corning, N. Y., is in hi s 25th year as Surrogate, a longer as di stri ct manager for the Social Security Ad ministration , Phil adelphia, Pa. , a ft er 20 yea rs. He a nd :'11rs. korup plan to motor to the West Coast and later visit Hawaii. 14 1925 Reunion-June 3 to 6, 1960 Dr. Vincent P. Casey, M '25, has been appointed Director of Pediatrics of the new Misericordia Ho pita!, 233d St., and Bronx River Pwky. He has an office in th e Bronx at 3105 Robert s Avenue and resid es with his wi fe and three ch ildren in New Rochelle, N. Y. Joseph Richards, Jr., FS '25, Vice-president of the Columbia Specialty Co., Chevy Chase, Md. , has been elected vi ce chairman of the board a nd the executive committee of the Suburban Tru st Co., Hyattsville, Md. Chairman of 35th R eunion- Medical School: Dr. Michael F. Kennedy, 1835 Eye Street, .W., Washington, D. C. Chairman of 35 th R eunion- Law School: ]. Harry LaBrum., 1507 Packard Bldg., Philad elphia 2, Pa. Cha irman of 25th Reunion-College: Andrew F. Gaffey, 96 Forest Street, Medford 55, Mas~ . 1927 Jos eph Edgard Dick, FS '27, of San Francisco, is Secr etary of the California Cattlemen's Association. He has authored articles on indu stry and agriculture for local and national trade and bu siness publications. Dr. Henry M. Gahan, C '27, was appointed Post Surgeon to Medford Massachusetts Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, recently. WilliamS. Tarver, C '27, has been elected secretary of th e Southern Natural Gas Co., Birmingham, Ala. He joined the firm in 1952, after havin g served a s associate GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE general cou nsel for the P etroleum Admin· istration for Defense. 1928 Hon. Earl R. Cross, L '28, has just begun his six year elec tive term as Municipal Ju dge in th e Municipal Court of Alma, Mich. He also practices law in Alm a and in all other courts of the State. His son, Richard E. Cross, was orda ined to th e P riesthood at th e University of Louvain , Belgi um in Jun e, 1958 and is assistant pastor at Vi itation Church , Bay City, Mich. AI Phillip Kane, C '28, L '32, G '34, was elected fir st vice president of the board of directors of th e Health and Welfare Council of the Nationa l Capital Area, Washin gton, D. C., recently. 1929 Cumberland Street, N.W., Washington 8, D. C. Chairman of 30th R eunion- Law School: Hon. Edward A. Tamm, 3353 Runnymede Sa int P eter's Coll ege, J ersey City, N. J. , ha s dedicated R ankin H all , named for th e la te Rev. R. Rush Rankin, S.J., Dean of Geo rgetow n Coll ege from 1928 to 1931. Father Rankin's name was chose n for th e stru cture, wh ich wil l be headquarter of the Coll ege's R.O.T.C. unit , in recognition of his d istinguished rec· ord as an Arm y chaplain in th e First World War. 1931 John W. Craddock, C '31, has been ap- Dr. Victor R. Alfaro, M '29, took offi ce as th e 93rd Presid ent of th e District of Colu mbia Med ical Society on J anu ary 1, 1960. J. Nevins McBride, C '29, was made a Knight of t. Gregory r ecently by P ope John XXIII, in recognition of his generosity to Ca tholic charities and foreign missions. poin ted merchandi sing director of Roche, Rickerd & Cleary, Inc., Chicago, Ill. Formerly, h e was fi ft een years with Swift & Company, directing the advertising for Swift's ten sub id iary companies. He lives a t 2145 Chestnut Street, Wilmette, Ill., and ha three ch ildren, Ruth, J o~n a nd Cathy. 1930 Reunion-June 3 to 6, 1960 Th e Most Rev. Jose ph B. Brunini, C '30, Rev. Frank Fadner, S.J ., FS '32, C '38, Auxiliary Bishop of J ackson, Miss., h as been named epi scopal chairm an of the Ca th olic Hospit al Association of the U. S., and Canada. Dr. Joseph F. Duffy, M '30, of Westwood, N. J., h as been elected to the board of directors of th e Hill sdale Na tional Bank. He is a member of th e staffs at P a cack Valley Hospital and Holy Name Ho pi ta!. Dr. John J. Flanagan, M '30, form er Washington r esident and internationally kn own orthopedic surgeon , has been mad e a Kni ght of S t. Grego ry th e Great by P ope John XXIII, in recog nition of his many charit able activities. He l ives at 517 Centre Street, So uth Ora nge, N. J . He has four children. Brigadier General Th omas W. Mat· tingly, M.C., U.S.A. (R et.) , M '30, will deliver the annual Kober Lee· lure at Georgetown on 1arch 16. Robert M. 0 ' Donnell, L '30, has b een elected secretary of th e Yale & Towne Manufactu ring Co. During his association with the Compa ny ince 1958, he has par· ticipated in th e international materials handling conference held at Versailles, Fran ce, and conduc ted surveys of the lock and h ardware markets in Great Brit ai n in 1958 and mat eri als handli ng equipment markets in Germ any, where he is now living. Chairman of 30th R eu nion- Coll ege : Joseph T. Gardner, 5311 Nevada Avenu e, N.W. , Wa hington 15, D. C. Chairman of 30th R eunion- Medi cal School : Dr. Th omas W. Mattingly, 3638 COTTON & HARRIS P lace, N.W. 1516 P Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. HUdson 3-9400 To serve your best ••• serve MELVERN! 1932 G '40, has been nam ed Knight Commander of the Ord er of Isabella the Catholic of Spain in recognition of hi s merits in im· proving Ibero-American relation s. Th e Coll ege Clas of '32 held its Annual Reuni on Dinner on F ebruary 11 at th e Wa ldorf Astoria Hot el in New York Cit y. Members of the Comm itt ee were Will iam .J. Gerety, J r., Lawrence A. Bengert , Jr. , John B. O'Connor, Dr. John Kilgall cn, Hon. Mark ullivan , and Gerard J. O'Brien. At your nearest dealer Dr. George M. Miller, C '32, M '36, was named President of th e Rahway, N. J. Me· moria! Hospi tal Medical Staff, recently. Dr. Charles R. Walsh, M '32, of 475 Berkeley Ave., Sou th Orange, N. ]., attend· ing obstetrician at St. Mary's Hospital, Orange, ha s been elected president of the hospital's medi cal staff fo r 1960. H. L. ROGERS Everything in Sheer Meta/ ancl Roofing 1933 John A. Coakley, Jr., C '33, ha s just been elected President of the Youngstown, Ohio, Chamber of Commerce. Dorothy Fowler, N '33, is Clinic Super· visor of Group Health Assoc iation, Inc., Arlington Bldg., Washington, D. C. Thomas E. Stakem, Jr. , L -'33, has been appointed vi ce chairm an of the F ederal 1aritime Board by Pre id cnt Eisenhower. SERVING GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY FOR 31st YEAR 1249 CONGRESS COURT, N. W. 1934 Maurice W. Levy, L '34, of Verona, N. J. , has been appointed to the newly created post of trade counsel for HolTman-La Roche, Tnc., manufacturers of pharm aceut icals and vi tamin s. After being with th e U. . Pat ent Offi ce for 15 years, Mr. Levy joined the above company in 1954. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE WASHINGTON 7, D. C. FE 3-6848 EM 2-2596 15 TENNIS SCHEDULE 1960 Date Opponent Place March 20-Dartmouth _____________________________ Home March 28-M. I. T. _____________________________ Home Apri I April April April April April April April April April !-Syracuse ---------------------------------- Home 2-Maryland ------------------------------ Away 6-Brown _____________________________________ Home 7-Penn State __________________________Home 11-Bucknell ------------ ----------------------- Home IS-Cherry Blossom Tournament._ Home 19-George Washington _________________Home 20-North Carolina & Wisconsin .... Home 27-Randolph Macon _____________________ Home 30-Fordham _________________________________ Home May May May May May 4-American University ................ Home 7-Loyola --------------------------------·Home 11-Navy ------------------------------------ Away 14-Penn ----------------------------------------- Home 17-William & Mary ------------------------Home Coach: Clark Taylor 1935 Reunion-J une 3 to 6, 1960 Dr. Jam es J. Morrissey, M '35, has been appoint ed chief surgeon of St. John's Hospital, Wood side, N. Y. Col. John Joseph Pelosi, M '35, Command er of th e 68th Medical Group at Fort Meade, Md., has two daughters, Madonna, 20, and Tonia, 19, following a family tradition by enrolling as stud ent nurses at the Washington Hospital Center. Their mother is a nurse, turned homemaker, trained at Ma sachu setts General Hospital, Boston . Their grandmother and aunt are also in the nursing profession. Henry A. Radzikowski, L '35, has been appointed hi ghway expert to the United Arab Republi c. The highway program in th e U. A. R. includes developm ent of road s to and around th e famou s Aswan Dam and connections from Aswan through Kom Ombe to the Red Sea Port of Bermis. He has been with the bureau of Public Road s for many years. Chairman of the 25th Reunion- College : Charles A. Gildea, Jr., 46 E. Saddle River Road, Saddle River, N. J. Chairman of the 25th Reunion- Medical School: Dr. Luther W. Gray, 4910 Scarsdale Road, Sumner, Md. Chairman of 25th R eunion- Law School: George P. Lamb, 425 13th St reet, N.W., Washin gton 4, D. C. 1936 Angelo J. Adonizio, L '36, was named a vice president of th e Liberty National Bank, Pittston, Pa., recently. He is associated with hi s brother in th e Addy Asphalt Company and Adonizio Brothers, Inc. Dr. Jam es R. Cullen, M '36, was elected Presid ent of the Hartford, Conn., Medical Soc iety recently. He is att ending surgeon 16 on the St. Francis Hospital Staff, and also consulting surgeon at the Institute of Living, Litchfi eld Memorial Hospital and the stale prison. George M. Good, C '36, L '39, has been named Director of Dealer Development at Chris-Craft Corporation headquarters in Pompano Beach, Fla. Formerly Assistant Sales Manager of th e Roam er Steel Boat Division of Chris-Craft at Holland, Mich., he will serve as liaison between ChrisCraft and its deal er organization. Philip J. Monaghan, C '36, has been appointed vice-pre id ent of General Motors in charge of the Process Development Staff. In his new assignm ent, he will direct a staff of engineers and oth er specialists at the General Motors Technical Center, Warren, Mich. Joseph J. Nasser, L '36, was elected Mayor of Corning, N. Y. 1937 Matthew L. Devine, L '37, has been elected president of the Amphenol-Borg Electronics Corporation. He had been a pa rtner in th e management consultant firm of Cresap, McCormick & Paget, and r esigned to assume his new position. Harold Norman Linker, FS '39, recently presented a full-length color film at Stanford University, showing the scenic side of Cuba. He also film ed the whaling sequence for RKO's "The Sea Around Us." He is production director of International Films, Hollywood. He speaks five languages, including Japanese, and has mad e films in 30 countries. 1940 Reunion-J une 3 to 6, 1960 Joseph A. McBride, C '40, was invested as a Knight of St. Gregory by Archbishop Thomas A. Boland in ceremonies at Sacred Heart Cathed ral, Newark, N. J. He was honored by Pope John XXIII for his generosity to Catholic Charities and to the foreign missions. Dr. Harrison Smith, FS '39, G '50, r ecently took his vows in St. Matth ew's Cathedra l in Washington as a Knight of Ju tice in th e overeign Ord er of St. John of J erusalem, Knights of Malta. Chairman of the 20th Reunion-Medical School: Dr. 0. Benwood Hunter, Jr., 915 19th Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. 1938 Maurice L. Ne e, C '38, formerly Assis- 1941 Joseph S. Harvey, C '41, vice presid ent tant to the Vice President in charge of Trinidad Op erations of Texaco, Inc., has been promoted to Director of the Budget. Dr. V. Raymond Tokar, C '38, was elec ted vice presid ent of Montclair, N. J., Commun ity Hospital recently. of the First Seneca Bank and Trust Company of Oil City, Pa., has accepted an invitation to teach in the spring term of th e Adu lt Education Institute held at St. Joseph's Academy in Titusville, Pa. His course is entitl ed "Managing Your Money." Gerard P. Kavanaugh, L '41, of Wilmington, Del., is being eyed as GOP Nomi nee for Mayor next year. Form erly an FBI agent in Washington, Denver, and Chicago, he joined the legal department of the Hercul es Powd er Company in 1944. Frederick B. Sitterding Til, C '41, has been elected a Direc tor of th e Virgini a Tru st Co., of Ri chmond , Va. He is also Vi ce-Presid ent and Director of the Home Brewing Co., of Richmond. 1939 William A. Brennan, Jr., C '39, was elected last August as National Vice Command er of Th e Am erican Legion, covering thirteen Eastern and New England States. Thomas ]. Carlon, Jr., FS '39, has been appoint ed Vice Presid ent of the First National Bank of J ersey City, N. J. He has been in charge of the bank's office in Harri son, N. J. , and will cont inu e there, as well as supervising the other two offices in West Hud son. Major Norman F. Jarvis, C '39, returned last May from a tour of duty in Vietnam and is assign ed to the G 3 Sec tion of Headquarters, Second US Army, Fort Ceo. G. Meade, Mel. _j.Jawkin:J (j/a:J:J Compan'i , .Jnc. Rear 43 M Street, N. W. WASHINGTON D.C. MEtropolitan 8-4520 1942 Thom as P. Nowi cki, L '42, of Dunkirk, N. Y., has been appointed city clerk; he is chairman of the Dunkirk Democratic Committee. Dr. Michaei Palamar, M '42, of Gloversville, N. Y. , has been appointed diplomate by th e American Board of Surgery. He is a full attending surgeon at Littauer Hospital. 1943 Carl H. Bnnje, C '43, L '49, is Supt. of Claim s in th e Seattle Branch Offi ce of th e Un ited States Fid elity and Guaranty Company. His a istant is David D. Webber, L '50. He ha s four son s, aged six , four, two and one year. Dr. John F. Davis, M '43, of Bloomfi eld , N. J., has been elected Presid ent of the Medical Staff of St. Vincent's Hospital . He is a general practitioner with offi ces at 187 Broad Street in Bloomfield. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE EV ER Y ME MB ER GE TA ME MB ER Thi s issue of th e Alumni Magazine goes only to Du es Paying members like your elf. 8,124 Members will see and the Alumni Ma ga zine for March, 1960. If he says he hasn't seen it, you have a prospect. Suggest that he fill in a nd mail enjoy it. 13,056 Georgetown Alumni will not see it, only th e co upon be low with his check for whatever class of membership he desires to take. Your new subscriber will beca use they are not currentl y members. It is the desi re of the Editorial Board of the Magazine to make your Ma gazine beller a nd better each issue. You will agree that we are well on th e way to a bigger and brighter thank yo u for th e suggesti on which will keep him in co ntact with his al ma mater a nd with his Geo rgetown fri end s. If every reader gets ju st one inactive Al umnus to join, th e publica tion, but it is only with an increased membership that nex t iss ue of th e Alumni Ma ga zine wi ll reach 16,248 mem- we ca n continu e to go forward. bers of the Georgetown family . Ask the next Geo rgetown alumnu s you see if he enjoyed YOU ARE ELECTED TO THE COMMITTEE ! r------- -------- -------- -------- -------- ---I desire to join the Georgetown University Alumni Association and to receive the Alumni Magazine for the next year. Enclosed is my check for D D D D Regular Membership ($5.00 per year) Membership X ($1 0.00 per ye.ar) Sustaining Membership ($25.00 per year) Council of 100 Membership ($1 00 .00 per year) Name .................................. .................................. .................................. ................................. .Ciass ....................... {s treet) (number) (ci ty) {zone) Draw Checks to GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION {state) 1944 Dr. Henry F. Capozzella, M '44, Director of Anesthesiology at Arlington , Va., presented a 30-minute television show entitled "Space Age" on WTOP, Washington, D. C., on May 2, 1959. His discussion dealt primar ily with problems of respiration. Two of his children, Andrea and Mark, participated in th e program. John Reed Draper, L '44, has been appointed national data system sales manager for Stromberg Division of General Time Corporation with offices in Thomaston, Conn. Charles W. Stewart, Jr. , L '44, President Machinery and Allied Products Institute, Washington, D. C., spoke before the Lancaster, Pa., Chapter of the Society for the Advancemen t of Management recently. His topic was "The Rol e of Ca pital Equipment in Economic Growth." 1945 Reunion-June 3 to 6, 1960 Dr. Anthony P. Culotta, D '45, has been promoted to the rank of Commander in the U. S. Naval Reserve Dental Corps. He is Executive Offi cer o£ the Naval Reserve Dental Company 5·8 at Georgetown Dental School of whi ch Dr. (Commander) Francis ] . Fabrizio, D '35, is commandin g officer. Trainin g Offi cer of the Company is Dr. (Co mmander) Albert G. Paulsen, D '45. The Compa ny was commi ssioned in 1951. Anderson D. Hodgdon, Jr., FS '45, head of the Washingto n investm ent firm bearing his name, has been elected a director of Aberdeen Investor Programs. He is al so a director of American Service Life Insurance Company. Dr. William M. K elly, M '45, has been appointed city physician of Elmira, N. Y., for the next two years. His offices are located at 710 Park Place. He is married and has six children. Dr. Michael]. Mast rangelo , C '45, M '50, after his Army service and five years in surgery at Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y., is now associated with three other doctors in Bolman Surgical Associates, for the practice of general, thoracic and cardiovascular surgery at 717 Broadway, Ft. Wayne, Ind. Chairman of 15th Reunion-Law School : S. Walt er Shine, 7204 Rid gewood Ave., Chevy Chase 15, Mel. 1946 Dentistry. Dr. Stephen P. Ferraro, M '46, of Pa terson, N. J., pas been appo inted county jail physician. Dr. Richard D. Mnrray, M '46, has recently opened a new medical cl inic, in partnership with Dr. Ernest Alvin, at 2125 Glenwood Avenue, You ngstown , Ohio. Th e clinic will treat patients needing plastic surgery and other fa cial and body repairs. The new building, constru cted at a cost of S125,000, has three treatm ent rooms, an operating room for minor surgery, offices for both doctors, and a secretary's office. Robert E. R edding, L '46, who was with the Civil Aeronau tics Board several years, has bee n appointed counsel for the Transportation Association of America, and exec utive assistant to Harold F. Hammond. executive vice presid ent. Dr. Paul A . Ryan, M '46, h as been appointed hea d of th e urology service of the Fresno, Calif., Vcterans Administration Hospital. Dr. William F. Boys, D '46, of Garden City, N. Y. , has been elected presid ent of the Catholic Dentists Guild of the Rockville Centre Diocese. He is a Diplomate of th e American Board o£ Oral Surgeo ns and a fellow of the Society of Oral Surgeons. Dr .. William. R. Cinotti, C '46, D '51, has been appo inted a member of the periodontia staff of the Seton Hall School of M. Morton Anerbach, FS '47, G '53, is an assistant professor of politi cal science at San Fernando Vall ey State College a t Northr idge, Calif. He is the au thor of a recent book, The Con·servative Illnsion, which he describes as an "evaluation of conservati sm in general and th e 'New Conserva tism' in particular." lames L. Kinney, FS '47, of Buffalo, JOHN A. VOLPE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 1947 HUBERT, INC. Catere11 and Conlectione11 DIRECTION-HENRY J. TRILLING • WEDDINGS DINNERS TEAS LUNCHEONS RECEPTIONS • • Complete Rental Servic• 2001 S Street, N. W. 54 Eastern Ave. 261 Constitution Ave. Malden, Mass. Washington, D.C.. BUILDERS OF GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY'S Dormitc;>ry-Dining Hall for students of the COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DUpont 7-1212 LUMBER • MILLWORK • BUILDING MATERIALS & HARDWARE "WALLY" BEHRENDT Clan '43 Stembler & Ford, Inc. Capitol Heights, Md. PHONE REdwood 5-6600 18 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE N. Y., has bee n appointed confid ential clerk to Judge William J. R egan. George C. Lazard, FS '47, has been appoint ed export manager of the Tow· motor Corporation, Cleveland, Ohio. Richard T. McDonough, L '47, of Indian Lake, N. ]. , has been appointed by the Denville Township Committee as Magistrate. He has practiced law in Newark for 11 years and served as assistant corporation counsel for the City of Newark from 1949-54. Dr. fohn C. McGiff, C '47, has been appointed as In structor in the Department of Medi cine of th e University of P ennsylvania, commencing July 1, 1960. He has been marri ed for two years and has one son. John !. McMahon, C '47, of P awtucket, R. I., has been appointed a r egistered representative on th e staff of Davis & Davis of Provid ence, members of the New York Stock Exchange. Thomas L. Ryan, C '47, of South Orange, N. J., gradua te of Columbia Law School, '52, member of th e New York Bar, formerly a sociat.ed with the firm of Curtis, MalletPrevost, Colt & Mosie, New York City, has been associated with th e firm of Bashan, Ringe & Correa in Mexico City since January 1957. He is in the fifth and last year of th e Law Faculty of the National Autonomou s University of Mexi co, where he is studying for a regular Mexi can law degree. News of his marriage appears elsewhere in these colums. Dr. Robert !. Tonery, D '47, is practicing De~tis try in San Francisco, Calif. He resid es at 150 Haight Street. Dr. Eugene T. Wisniewski, D '47, is attending Columbia University, specializing in Orthodontics. 1948 Dr. Gonzalo E. Aponte, C '48, is Assistant Professor of Pathology at J efferson Medi cal College in Phi lad elphia, a nd has recently been appointed Research Collaborator at Brookhaven National Laboratory in Lon g Island. He has been chosen a Markl e Scholar in Medi cal Sciences by the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation. Dr. Eugene W. Beauchamp, Jr., C '48, has been promoted from associate to as- sistant attendin g surgeon of Mercy Hogpita], Springfield, Mass. Thomas R. Behan, C '48, L '52, has been appointed attorney in the office of the counsel of the IBM Processing Division in White Pl ains, N. Y. Dr. Francis P. Catanzaro, M '48, recently became a F ellow of The American College of Surgeons. He is certified by the American Board of General Surgery and Th e American Board of Abdominal Surgery. His practice is condu cted in Provid ence, R. I. He and Mrs. Catanzaro, Yvonne Anderson, N '46, have four children and reside in Cranston, R. I. Louis F. Dempsey III, FS '48, 305 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Ill., recently was promoted to second vice presid ent in the international banking department of The Northern Trust Co., Chicago, Ill. Capt. lames D. Kennedy, USA, FS '48, recently qualified as expert in firing the .45 caliber pistol while assigned to the 8th Division's 504th Infantry in Germany. Captain Kennedy, commander of the infantry's Heavy Mortar Battery, entered the Army in 1950. Vance A . Knight, B '48, has been promot ed to assistant man ager of Continental Oil Company's industrial relations department, Hou ston, Texas. William M. Kup ec, FS '48, is Assistant Principal of Syosset High School, Syosset, N. Y. John R. Lally, C '48, was elected President of C. G. Hussey & Company, Division of Copper Range Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., recently. Kenneth A. Riordan, C '48, has been promoted to Superintend ent of th e Buffalo Division of International Correspondence Schools of Scranton, P a. Hi s address is : 54 South Harvest Road, Williamsville, Buffalo 21, N. Y. 1949 !. Parker Connor, C '49, L '53, announces t.he formation of a partnership for th e general practice of Law with Eugene F. Mullin, Jr., und er the firm name of Mullin and Conner, Suite 300, Southern Building, Wa hington 5, D. C. Francis Jerome Cunningham, L '49, of W. A. LOCKWOOD DENTAL CO. Ritter, S.S. White and all other Leading Dental Equipment Yonkers, N Y., is the father of J erry Cunningham, the grandnephew of Bishop Fulton ]. Sheen and the principal character of a story in Look Magazine, titled A Boy in Rome. Last summ er J erry accompanied th e Bishop to Rome ; from the itinerary and experiences appeared this story of "a bishop and a boy" touring Rome. Henry W. Eiring, B '49, is Assistant Secretary of the Standard Lime and Cement Company, Division of AmericanMarietta Company, Baltimore, Md. Charles P. Gallagher, FS '49, L '52, was elected assistant tru st officer of Th e Central Bank & Trust Co., Denver, Colo., recently. Paul F. Gavaghan., C '49, has resigned from General Electri c Co., and organized an ind epend ent public relations firm, Gavaghan & Hawl ey, Inc., 225 East 48th Street, New York City. William B. Gibbon., FS '49, is teaching German and Russian at th e University of Nebraska; hi s address is 1630 H St., Apt. B-2, Lincoln, Nebr. Thomas F. Graham., C '49, has been named by Baxter Laboratories, Inc., as clinical r esearch coordinator of the Northeastern United States. He has five children and lives at 213 Brentwood Road, Haver. town, Pa. Francis !. McNamara, Jr., C '49, L '51, of Greenwich, Conn., has been named a partner in th e law firm of Cummings and Lockwood . He is a member of the Bar of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut and the Supreme Court of the United States. Edward !. O'Hayer, C '49, form erly with the Du Pont Company has joined Frank Ix & Son, weaver of synthetic fibers, as assistant sales manager, located in New York City. Dr. Sarah E. Stewart, M '49, the first woman to graduate with a medical degree from Georgetown is a research scientist at th e National Cancer Institute. She recently gave a lecture at the D. C. Medical Society Auditorium on "Multiple Cancer Types Induced by a Single Virus." Charles P. Webb, FS '49, is sales representative for the Danvers Shoe Co., covering the states of California, Oregon , Washington, and Idaho. He and hi s family- THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. COMPANY DENTAL EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES Teeth and Supplies Expert Dental Office Planning 1722 EYE STREET, N.W. NA. 8-1240 WASHINGTON, D. C. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 900- 17th Street, N.W. Washington 6, D. C. NAtional 8-5272 19 three children, two girls and a boy-live at 1755 Ocean Oaks Road, Carpenter, Calif., and he says, "Any Georgetown men passing by are always welcome." 1950 Reunion-June 3 to 6, 1960 Dr. Fran cis E. Barse, M '50, is a Diplo· mate, American Board of Surgery, Instruc· tor in Surgery at Hahnemann Medical Col· lege & Hospi tal, Philad elphia, Pa. His of· fi ce is at 1486 Haddon Avenue, Camden, N.J. Joseph. E. DeCaro, FS '50, is associated with the Federated Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., of Kingston, Jamaica, in the capacity of International Sales Manager. He and his family, wife, daughter and three sons, reside in Kin gston and invite classmates to look them up . Lawrence C. Gayle, Jr., FS '50, ha s been appointed assistant director of the labor re· lation's departm ent of the New Orl eans Steamship Association. Prior to this, he was employed by Alcoa Steamship Co., Inc., in the U. S. and overseas. Francis D. Gillis, C '50, and Mrs. Gillis spent the holiday season at home in New England but plan shortly to return to En gland where they have been living since 1958. Anthony Harty, Jr. , C '50, an agent for the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company in Savannah, was appointed to the School Board of Chatham County, Ga., recently. Thomas ]. McGrath., FS '50, is a captain on extend ed active duty wi th the Air Force as Instructor of Air Science at Stan· ford University. Thomas L. McK enna, FS '50, after gradu· ation in September, was appointed U.S. Vice Consul and sent to Germany, where he acted as Visa Officer on D. P. and Bolks· Deutsch Program until June, 1952, work· ing in Austria and Germany. Then, he was appointed DAC with th e U. S. Army in Austria. He is now in Bremerhaven and reports that he and his wife enjoy Europe and hope to remain longer. Raymond A. O'Hara, Jr., C '50, is taking one year from teaching in Con necticut to study Mathemati cs at the University of Colorado, 1959-60. John C. Pinto, Jr., C '50, after nine years in the Th ea trical Accountancy fi eld , is associated with Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York. Fayez Abdullah Sayegh, G '50, Counselor to the United Nati ons, addressed th e students and faculty of Eastern Michigan University recently; his topic was "New American Opportunities in the Arab World." Chairman of lOth R e union~Law School: John J. Schlick, 1365 Rittenhou se Street, N. W., Washington 11, D. C. Chairman of lOth Reunion - College: Albert E. May, 2805 Daniel Road, Chevy Chase 15, Md. 1951 Louis J. Alexis, FS '51, is in ·charge of the District of Columbia office for the 1960 Census. Dr. Paul Conley, C '51, having completed his resident training at th e Rhod e Island Hosp ital, Provid ence, ha s been assigned to the post of Chief of Med icine at the U. S. Army Hospital, Fort Lee, Va. , with the rank of Captain. Charles T. Dixon, Jr., FS '51, of D'Arcy Advertising Company, New York, h as been named director of the recently created Travel and Industrial Information Division of the South Carolina State Development Board. A public relations account executive at D'Arcy, he is a former South Carolina newspaper man. William P. Doyle, C '51, announces that he has moved his suite of offices to 2325 Atlantic Boulevard, Pompano Beach, Fla., for th e general practice of Law. He is a For Hoyas, Old and Young ... .,\\orriott MOTOR - UAA.4 TEHAAN'S HOTEL At the Virginia End of 14th Street Bridge Establi•hed Some of the features that make the Marriott so popular with Georgetown's Sons ... those in Washington for entertaining, and those revisiting Washington on business or for old-times' sake : • Only 5 minutes from Healy Tower and Downtown Washington; only 3 minutes from Washington National Airport. • 370 Handsomely decorated rooms, completely sound-proofed and air-conditioned for year-round comfort. • Telephones in all rooms, also free TV, hi-fi and radio. • Reg ister from your car, parking adjacent to all rooms. Hertz car rentals and taxis if desired. • Large outdoor ice skating rink free to Winter guests, and swimming pools during Spring and Summer. • Newsstand , gift, barber and beauty shops. Room and valet service. • Luxurious suites and Private Function Rooms available for groups of all sizes. • Delicious char-broiled foods in the smart Sirloin & Saddle Room. For Reservations, Phone NAtional 8-4200 in Washington, or Circle 5 -8668 in New York City MARRIOTT MOTOR 1911 CHARLES E. MANTZ INSURANCE 7942 Wisconsin Avenue Bethesda, Maryland Oliver 2-5528 HOTEL Th e World's Largest U. S. 1 and Va . 350 20 Washington 1, D. C. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE RUBBER STAMPS Rubber Printing Pl a tes Co rp. & Notary Seals AMITY RUBBER STAMP COMPANY 1127 9 th St., N. W. (Bet . l & M Sts.) ADams 2-3141 Duane S. Reed, B '51, accountant and form er assistant treasurer of Kuhlman Builders Supply & Brick Co., Toledo, Ohio, has joined the faculty of Davis Business College to teach junior and seni or accou nting. David B. Stenzel, FS '51, is acting Assistant Professor of History at Stanford University. Matthew!. Tro y, C '51, writes that he is practicin g law in New York City with offi ces in Queens Village, Long Island and in Brooklyn, and would like to hear from some of his classmates. He has three children. 1952 member of the Massachusetts a nd Florid a Bar Associations. Henry St. ] . Fitzgerald, C '51, L '56, assistant U. S. Attorney in Alexandria, Va., since 1956, has been promoted to be chief assistant for the Eastern District of Virginia. As principal assistant United States Attorney, he will supervise three assistan ts in Norfolk, two in Ri chmond , and one in his main office in Alexandria. Henry L. ]alette, L '51, has been admilled to th e Bar in Florida and is serving as a supervising attorney for the National Labor Relation s Board in Tampa. Thomas R. Kingsley, FS '51, L '55, has been appoint ed General Manager of the Movers Co nference of Am erica. A member of the District of Columbia Bar, he is admitted to practice before th e Interstate Commerce Co mmission and th e U. S. Court of Claims. Richard P. McGrath, C '51, graduated from Harva rd Law School in 1954 after serving on the Law Review. He is asso· ciated with Cummings & Lockwood, a Stamford, Conn ., law firm specializing in corp orate practice. He has a baby daughter four months old. John. ]. Moffett, FS '51, has been appointed manager, ex port sales department, by Th e Pfaudler Co., division of Pfaudler P ermutit Inc., of Rochester, N. Y. Charles T. Ragsdale, B '51, an employee of Marine Headquarters, Washington, D.C., has a worthwhile hobby, coin collecting. A Lincoln head cent proved to be worth 15,000 times its face value recently when he sold it to a local collector. GEORGE A. COMLEY Florist • 3209 M Street, N. W. · FE 3-7220 Robert D. Bluntzer, Jr., C '52, having graduated from th e School of Veterinary Medicine of Texas A & M, last May, is practi cing at Spring An imal Hospital in Corpus Christi, Texas. Capt. William B. Dunbar, FS '52, has been transferred to Castle Air Force Base, Merced, Calif. He is a ttending J et training School. Dr. Samuel C. Falvo, M '52, announces the opening of his office for the practice of general surgery at 511 Sixth A venue West, Hendersonville, N. C. Donald P. Fleming, C '52, is a tax as· sessor for the government of the District of Columbia. Dr. ]an Karski, G '52, form erly of the P olish underground and Polish Foreign Service, spoke recently at the quarterly meeting of the Baltimore section of the Archdiocesan Holy Name Union . A book of his wartime experiences, "Story of a Secret State" was a book-of-the-month. Marc Anthony Messina, FS '52, has just fini shed his 14th month as a Business & Finance Editor and Special F eatures Writer for the Daily American in Rome, Italy. Dr. John T. Murray, Jr., M '52, has entered the Shadowbrook Novitiate of The Society of J esus in Lenox, Mass. Lutrelle F. Parker, L '52, has been appointed to the Planning Commission by th e Arlington , Va., Coun ty Board . Lt. Col. Wilson R. R eed, USA, G '52, is attending the Army War College a t Carlisle Barracks, Pa. The ten-month course is scheduled to be completed in June, 1960 and prepa res sel ected officers for future assignment s to top staff and command positions in the Armed Forces and other key government positions. John ]. Riley, Jr., C '52, is a · product manager with Lever Broth ers Company in New York City. He recently moved into a new home in Wilton, Conn. Albert ] . Saflo, C '52, L '55, is a member of a new law firm to be known as Stein Rubens and Saffo, with offices at 240 Fair: field Avenu e, Bridgeport, Conn . 1953 Vincent Anello, Jr., C '53, announces the removal of his law office to 40 W. Main Street, Riverhead , L. I. , N. Y., und er the GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE firm name of Alario and Anello. He al so wishes to th ank all who sent kind messages of . sympathy on the recent death of hi s fath er, Dr. Vincen t Anello, Knight of St. Gregory. Dr. Frank ]. Augello , C '53, has opened an office for the practice of podiatry and foot orthopedics at 1578 Easton Avenue ' Bethlehem, Pa. William !. Cleary, Jr., C '53, is a gradua te of New York Medical College. He served his internship at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Youngstown , Ohio, and is in residency at th e Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit in Internal Medicine. Peter N. Corcoran, C '53, is on the fin ancial staff of the General Motors Corp. Tax Division in Detroit, Mich. Herman Albrecht H eise, G '53, received his Ph.D. in history while in Munich, Germany. Hi s thesis was the Hi story of Einbeck, the native German town of both his parents. Dr. !. Peter 1ohnston, C '53, is a resident in general surgery at Harper Hospital, Detroit, Mich. Lt. Albert G. Loew, Jr., USN MC, C '53, M '57, is taking his residency in neurosurgery at Huntington Memorial Hospital, Pasadena, Calif. He is the fa ther of four children. Dr. Francis Regis Perri, M '53, has been chosen by Memorial Hospital, New York City, and Mercy Hospital, Pittsburgh, to do study and research in the field of cancer for th e period of one year. On his r eturn , he will once again be associated with Mercy Hospital. Angelo A. Mastrangelo, C '53, L '55, has become a member of the firm of Fox and Schackn er and will continue the general practice of law at 671 Broad Street, New· ark 2, N. J . Dr. Carlos F. Mendoza-Tio, C '53, received hi s DDS from Loyola University of th e Sou th, New Orleans, La., on May 1, 1958. Aft er one year of post-grad uate work at Loyola, he is enrolled at Tufts University, School of Dental Medic ine, for furth er post-grad uate work in dentistry. Dr. Daniel F. Sullivan, D '53, is in general practice in North Conway, N. H. , a resort town in the White Mountains. He is Presid ent of the Holy Name Society a nd of the local P . T. A. 1954 Dr. Charles]. Avallone, C "54, M '58, is a resident in Internal Medi cine at D. C. Gen· era! Hospital and wi ll start his seco nd yea r's resid ency in July at J ersey City Medical Center. He and his wife, formerly Miss Ann Burrows, N '54, have a daughter, Lisa Ann, born in April , 1959. Gerald T. Foley, C '54, L '57, has pa~sed th e Bar exa mination s for the District of Columbi a a nd New J ersey and is with th e law fir m of Shaw, Pindar, McElroy, Connell & Foley, 24 Co mmerce Street, F ederal Trust Building, Newark 2, N. J. Dr. S. A. Knp cha, C '54, D '58, of Easton , 21 Pa., has opened an office for th e practice of Denti stry at 201 Catt ell Street. Bernard J. Lammers, C '54," G '57, and Mrs. Lammers are staff members of the Association for International Development, 374 Grand Street, Paterson 1, N. J. Mr. Lammers is the AID Publication s Editor. AID will supply speakers for any occasion on th e international lay apostolate, the social and ethical problems which a ccompany technological progress, and on the rei igious life of th e mod ern layman-especially his role in th e liturgy of the Church. Captain Jas eph. R. LaPaglia, M '54, has been tran sferred to Fort Devens, Mass., wh ere he is stationed at th e U. S. Army Hospital for practice of Obsterics and Gynecology. John T. Lynch, C '54, is associated with th e law firm of Davidson, Bult<:rmore and Lynch at 224 East Broad, Westfield, N. ]. Leonard M. Rudy, G '54-, ha s moved out of Manhattan into hi s own home in Hartsdal e, N. Y. Dr. Joseph A. Selecky, D '54, of Altoona, Pa. , was recently elected president of the Blair County Dental Society. He is married and the fath er of one son. Richard B. Williams, C '54, served two years of acti ve duty in Japan with th e Air Force after graduation. R eturning to th e U. S. in 1956, he ent ered the University of Texas School of Law, tran sferrin g from there in 1958 to S.M.U. School of Law, from which he graduated in June 1959. He is a member of th e Texas State Bar Asso· ciation of the Dallas law firm of Tobolowskey, Hartt, Schlinger & Blalock. 1955 Reunion-Jun e 3 to 6, 1960 Michael R. Byrnes, C '55, has joined Robert W. Baird & Company a s a r egistered representative in th e firm's Capitol Court Office, Milwaukee, Wi s. Joseph M. Colavecchi, L '55, is assistant trust officer at the Clearfi eld Trust Co., Clearfield, Pa. He recently passed th e Pennsylvania Sta te Bar examinations, previously passed the New York and Washington , D. C. Bar examinations and is a member of th e American Bar Association. John. M. Courtney, FS '5~ . who has been a representative of the Singer Sewing Machine Company in the Philippines, has been appointed General Manager for the Company in Indon esia. His address is : Singer Sewing Machin e Company, Djl. Nusantara 34, Kantong Pos 84, Djakarta, Indonesia. Mitchell S. Cntler, B '55, has been ap· pointed manager of the newly opened Washington , D. C., office of C. B Whitaker, A. J. Zappa & Co., New York investment firm. James Cuff Deakin, L '55, h as entered into partnership with Attorney William R. Jon es for the general practice of Law in Danbury, Conn. , under the firm name, Jones & Deakin. Dr. Francis J. Major, C '55, has been accept ed for a three-year re id ency in obstetrics and gynecology at Walter Reed Hospital. Leo M. McCormack, L '55 , has been named tax and in surance counsel for Hot Shopp es, Inc., a motel and restaurant chain in Washington, D. C. Richard A. K. Russell, FS '55 , is Assistant Port En gineer for the Pacific Far East Line in San Francisco, Calif. L. Thomas Seely, Jr., L '55, has been appoint ed Manager of th e newly created Life Insurance Departm ent of Th e Motor Club of America. Donald J. Swanz, C '55, L '58, is on active duty with the Air Force as a legal offi cer , station ed at Otis AFB on Cape Cod, :\'lass. He was recently sworn in as a member of th e Bar of t.he Stat e of New York and of the Di strict of Columbia. Chairman of the 5th Reunion- Medical School: Dr. Angelos Paraskevas, 905 Duke Avenue, Roselle, N. J. 1956 P. B. Altermatt, L '56, has form ed a partnership with Attorney H enry B. Anderson- Anderson & Altermatt, for the general practice of Law in the United Bank Building, New Milford, Conn. Dr. John A. Casazza, M '56, has opened an office for the general practice of medicine and surgery at 286 Broad Street, R ed J. FRANK KELLY INC. Lumber & Millwork WOOTON'S ONE HOUR CLEANERS Announce~ SELF-SERVICE LAUNDROMAT 1230- 36th Street, N. W. Bank, N.J. James R. DeGiacomo, L '56, is associated with his brother, Robert J., in th e general practice of Law, with offices at 10 State St., Boston , Mass. He is a member of the fa cult.y at Portia Law School, Boston, and on th e legal staff of the Civ il Liberties Union. Harold E. deWolff, FS '56, is associated with Du Pont de Nemours Tnt. S. A. in Geneva, Switzerland. He has just completed th e work of setting up a subsidiary in Pari s, France, for the parent company and has joined the textile fib ers merchand ising departm ent. His office address is : c/o Du Pont de Nemours Int. S. A. 81 Ru e de l'Aire, Geneva. Adrian. P. Egan., B '56, is associated with Bernard J. Lammers, C '54, G '57, in the Association for Int ernational Development's worldwide apostolate. Dr. Joseph D. Ferrara, Jr., M '56, will fini sh hi s ass ignment at th e Cardiac Clinic of Johns Hopkin s University in July and will leave for Formosa on Naval duty . News of hi s approa chin g marria ge is found el ewh ere in these pages. lsmael H. Herrero, Jr., C '56, graduated from th e Univer sity of Pu erto Rico Law School in June, 1959; passed Pu erto Ri can Bar examinations in October; was admitt ed to the Bar on November 27 , 1959, and is associated with the law firm of Otero Suro, Box 2058, San Juan, P. R. Mary Elizabeth Kroll (Mrs. Richard ELECTR ONIC WHOLES ALERS • • • Hardware - Paints - Tools 2345 Sherman Avenue, N. W. 2121 Georgia Ave., N.W. NOrth 7-7400 Washington, D. C. PLENTY FREE PARKING 22 HUdson 3-5200 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Conlin), GI '56, is th e author of three textbooks titled "Let's Speak En glish," pub· lished by the U. S. Educa tional (Fulbright) Foundation in Thailand. Mrs. Con· l in compiled, tested and r evised the mate· rial for the tex tbooks while lec turing in Bangkok, Thailand. Mr. and Mrs. Conlin and son, Kevin, eight month s old, live in Sin gapore. Dr. Robert P. ] . Sabatini, D '56, an· nounces the openin g of hi s office for the prac tice of general Dentistry at 203 E. Oxford Aven ue, Alexandria, Va. George M. Siriffa, L '56, has been made a pa rtner in th e l aw firm of Cushman, Da rby a nd Cushman, Wash ington, D. C. He is a memb er of the Bar Assoc iations of the District of Co lumbia and Virginia. Dirck T elfer, FS '56, of Germantown, Mel ., has been appointed a career Foreign Service Offi cer by Presid ent Eisenhower. Th e appoin tment al o mak es him a Vice Consu l and a Secreta ry in th e Diplomat ic Service. Dr. John D. Tkacz, M '56. announces the opening of his office for th e practice of ped iatrics at 721 Pleasa nt St., Worcester, Mass. Anton.in G. Scalia, C '57, is on the staff of the Harvard Law R ev iew. George F. S chmitz, C '57, is employed at Abbott Labora tories in North Ch icago, Ill., as a Resea rch Assistant in Neuro-pharma· cology in the Departm ent of Experimental Therapy. Rob ert L. Schwind, L '57, was r ecently adm itted to th e Bar in Virg inia, having successfull y comp leted the Ba r examina· lion in Decem ber, 1959. Mary N. Solomon, N '57, is teachin g ob· stetri cs at th e St. Joseph's School of Nurs· in g, Flint, Mich. William 0. Storch, C '57, is associated with the stock brokerage finn of P ening· ton , Co lket & Co., in New York Ci ty. After graduation, he took grad uat e studies in International Law and History a t th e Uni· versily of Vienna for one yea r and traveled throu gh th e Midd le Ea t, visiting Turkey and E gypt. Rob ert P. Wilkins, CL '57, has r esigned as Tru t Officer of th e First Nati•mal Bank of South Carolina and opened an offi ce at 503 Barringer Build ing, Columb ia, S. C., for th e ge neral practi ce of Law. 1957 1958 Edward C. Bittner, FS '57, is Vice Con· sui at Zurich. Peter F. Fedak, C '57, was r ecently com· mi ssioned a seco nd lieu tena nt upon com· pl etion of th e Offi cer Candidate Sc hool at Th e Artill ery and JVTiRsil e Cen ter, Fort Sill, Okla. Rob ert J. Gillen., C '57, was r ece ntly ap· point ed assistant manager of publ icit y and advertising for th e 1ia ga ra Mohawk Power Corporation's Western Divi sion in Buffa lo, N.Y. Dr. Gerald Mataro, D '57, ha s opened an office as a dental surgeon at the Medical Arts Bui ldin g, 306 Ramapo Valley Road , Oak land, . ]. Dr. Antonio E. J. Monti, M '57, is doing genera l prac ti ce with the Col lege Center Med ical Croup-corpora tion type practice. The nam e of his office is the El Cajon Med ical Center in El Cajon, Calif. Marion T. Moses, N '57, i stud ying for her masters degree at Teachers College, Columbia University. 2nd Lt. ]ames C. Anthony, Jr., USA, B '58, recently pa rticipated in battery-level trammg tests conducted by the 4th Armored Division's 14th Artillery in Ger· many. He entered the Army in August 1958 and arrived overseas in October 1959. James B. Austin, FS '58, is in Munich working for the American Committee for Liberation. Victor F. Battaglia, L '58, passed the Delaware Bar Examina tion r ecen tly. He is a Willi ston Research Fellow working und er Dr. Walter H. E. J aeger a t the Law Center. Joseph K evin Brawley, FS '58, is in Knoxvill e, Tenn ., working for T echnical Tape Corporation. Eva Maria Bnsch, FS '59, is with the Insti tul zur Erforschun g der UDSSR e.V. in Muni ch. She and Bette-Jeanne H am· monel, FS '59, plan a tour of Europe in th e sprin g. Captain Fran cisco Canales, D '58, is serv· ing as a dental offi cer at Redstone Arsenal, RATHSKELLER EDMONDS OPTICIAN Downtown-Just 2 Blocks From the Statler Hotel German and Bavarian Dishes at Moderate Prices Dinner and Evening Music Imported and Domestic Beer on Tap No Cover , Minimum or Charge Ala. The Arsenal is an element of the Army Ordna nce Missile Command, which i responsible for all mi s il e and space pro· grams assig ned to the Arm y. Capt. and Mrs. Canales with their two children, Francisco Lui s and F ernand o Jose, are r e· sidin g on th e post. Peter E. Donn elly, Jr., L '58, has been named as a legal ass istant to John H. Fa n· ning of Washin gton , D. C., a Na tional La· bor Relation Board Member for Rhode Island. Rob ert A. Girmscheid, Jr., B '58, is As· sistant to th e Edu ca tional Director of the Inve tment Bankers Assoc iation of Amer· ica. Herbert ]. Grassie, Jr., FS '58, is a cost accoun tant for a San Di ego construction firm a nd a law student at the University of San Di ego. He has been appointed to associate membership in the Republica n Sta te Central Committee of Californ ia. Robert C. Gray, FS '58, is wi th Farrell Lines in Monrovia, Liberia. Dr. Paul A. Gualtieri, D '58, has received a leiter from Sister Martha Mary Mehrl, MM, 0 '58, who is sta tioned with the Medi· cal Mi ssion Sisters in Pakistan. She is hospitalized with a ser ious ill ness and is greatly con ce rn ed about th e d ental trea t· ment she is unable to r end er the needy. She asks her classmates for prayer s "that all goes well" over there. Ronald E. f erro, C '58, is with th e Air Force Service i n J apan. Edward ] . Ku chlewski, C '58, is a fresh· man at th e Un iversi ty of P enn sylvania Den· tal School, after spending 1958·59 at New York University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in the Biology Department. Since 1 898, the finest in e.tJe?Vear--and now, conta ct lenses WASHINGTON Maryland Corner 15th and Eye Sts. N.W. FR EE PAR KI NG- t 4 1!1 EYt St G P.M to ~ A . ~l G EO RGETOWN UN IVERSITY A LUMNI MAGAZINE N W Virginia Telephone lor all locations Di 7-7976 23 Joseph P. Nigon, L '58, has joined the Patent Department of W. R. Grace & Co. Aloysius G. Nolan, L '58, has accepted a full partnership in the law firm of McGin· nis, Berg, Shadyac & Nolan, with principal offices at 2014 16th St. North, Arlington, Va. He is a member of the Bar in Virginia and the District of Columbia. Lt. Col. Jack C. Novak, G '58, has recently been transferred to Allied Air Forces Central Europe (SHAPE) APO ll and is sta tioned in Fontainebleau, France, with a joint staff composed of British, French, Canad ian, Belgian, German, Dutch and U. S. Richard D. Wagner, Jr., C '58, has been assigned to the Biological Warfare Laboratories at Fort Detrick, Md., as a medical laboratory specialist. Dr. Karl F. Wieneke, M '58, and Mrs. Wieneke (Edith Marie Henchar, N '56) are now stationed with the U. S. Navy in Hawaii. Mrs. Wieneke is teaching at the St. Francis Hosp ital School of Nursing in Honolulu. First Lieut. Dominick ]. DiFrisco, D '59, is serving as a dental officer at Redstone Arsenal, Ala., an element of the Army Ordnance Missile Command which is responsible for all missile and space programs assigned to the Army. 2nd Lt. Brian ]. Dunn, C '59, recently completed the officer basic course at the Infantry School, Fort Benning, Ga. Daniel M. Dwyer, L '59, currently in the U. S. Army at Fort Knox, has been appointed a F ederal taxation lawyer for the U. S. Departm en t of Justice in Washington , D. C., commencing in May. Mary ]o Grotenrath, L '59, has been admitt ed to practice in Ohio, in the U. S. Court of the Distri ct of Columbia, and the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circui t, as well as to the U. S. Court of Military Appeals. Her office is at 1389 Glenn Avenue, Columbus 12, Ohio. Dr. Taffe M. Hadity, D '59, announces the opening of his office for the practice of Denti try at 124 Eagle Street, Utica, 1959 Ens. Thomas H. Bresson, L '59, was N.Y. John P. Kennedy, L '59, has been ap- graduated from the avy's Officer Cand idate School in Newport, R. I., on November 20. pointed assistant-Regulations and Internationa l Facilities, for the Air Transport Association of America. He will be repre- sen ting th e airlines on safety and operations' matters, working closely with the FAA and other Fed eral agencies r egardin g th e international im provement of air traffic control, meteorological and other such services overseas. Emily E. Lloyd, FS '59, is Secretary to the Assistant Dea n of Johns Hopkins University. 2nd Lt. Joseph T. Melone, C '59, has completed th e 12-week fi eld artillery and Missile School, Fort Sill, Okla. Dr. ]oseph S. Sahakian, D '59, has opened offices at 572 Washin gton Street, Wellesley, Mass., for the practice of Dentistry. Peter G. Seward, L '59, has been admitt ed to the Bay County Bar and will practice in the office of Attorney An th ony Bielawski in the Shearer Bui lding, Bay City, Mich. Panl D. Shafer, Jr. , L '59, was ad mitted to practice before the Crawford County Bar on November 16 and is associated with his uncle, State Senator Raymond P . Shafer, in the practi ce of law in Meadville, Pa. John E. Val/erie, ]r., L '59, is with the firm of Vincent S. Flaherty of Norwalk, Conn., in th e general practice of law. COMPLIMENfS JOHNSON & WIMSATT, INC. OF WHOLESALE LUMBER AND MILLWORK SPRINGFIELD, VIRGINIA Washington Wholesale Drug Exchange Clearbrook 6-4400 MERKLE PRESS, INC. formerly: Ransdell, Inc. P1b1ication Printeri and Pablishers-Letterpress and Otrset • Our Services Include Complete ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, ADDRESSING AND MAILING • Established 1906 ROTHSTEIN DENTAL LABORATORIES, INC. Specialists in Precision Attachments, Full Mouth Reconstruction, P.R.I. Denture Service, Gold and Acrylic Bridges, Micro Bond, Vital lium Precision Castings . for information contact our commercial printing department JOSEPH H. AUKWARO, MGR. 1722 Eye Streel, N.W. 110 Rbode lslaRd Anne, N. E., Washinatoa 11, D. C- 0Upont 7-6420-1-2-3-4-5-6 24 Washington, D. C. EXecutive 3-7 630 Silver Spring Branch 8422 Georgia Avenue JUniper 5-0006 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE CLASS OF 1981 Joanne Barse, daughter of Dr. Francis E. Barse, M '50, on March 18, 1959. Nicole Bea uchamp, daughter of Dr. Eugene W. Beauchamp, Jr., C '48, on December 26, 1959. Hu gh Michael Beins, son of Hugh ]. Beins, C '53, L '56, on November 28, 1959. Elizabeth Randolph Preston Bowen, daughter of Rob ert R eid Bowen, FS '48, on December 12, 1959. A daughter lo Joseph P. Carroll, C '54, on December 28, 1959. A daughter to Dr. Vin cent G. Desiderio, D '46, on November 20, 1959. Geraldine Maria Fager, daughter of Geraldine Sullivan Fager, N '54, on December 5, 1959. John Kennedy Foley, son of Ensign Robert ]. Foley, C '58, on February 1, 1960. Mary Kay Girmscheid, daughter of R obert A. Girmscheid, Jr., B '58, on February 18, 1959. A!bert Giordano liT, son of Albert Giordano, Jr., C '54, on December 31, 1959. Ann Louise Jacobson, daughter of Dr. Lewis L. Jacobson, C '49, on September 5, 1959. Paul J oseph Gualtieri, son of Dr. Paul A. Gualtieri, D '58, on January 12, 1960. William Sloan Harty, son of Anthony Hart y, Jr., C '50, on December 30, 1959. Sara Lee Howell, daughter of Walter R. How ell, Jr., C '54, on January 16, 1960. Marianne Johnston, dau ghter of Dr. John Peter Johnston, C '53, on December 17, 1959. Ca therin e Maureen Joyce, grandda ughter of William B. Platt, Jr., C '29, L '32, and Thomas W. E. Jo yce, C '29, on January 4, 1960. A son to Lt. Albert G. Lowe, Jr. , C '53, M '57, on May 15, 1959. Vincent Michael McCormack, son of Vincent S. McCormack, FS '58, on August 3, 1959. Thomas William McCreary IV, son of Dr. Thomas W. McCreary lll, C '51, on January 13, 1960. Martin Girard McHugh, son of Thomas A. McHugh, Jr., C '50, on November 28, 1959. James Timothy O'Dowd , son of John O'Dowd, C '50, L '52, GL '55, on January 25, 1960. Lisa Jo Rudy, daughter of L eonard M. Rudy, G '54, on January 6, 1960. Margaret Carrick Til ghman, daughter of Mrs. Philip Ogle Tilghman, G '46, on June 10, 1959- adopted at the age of six weeks. John Clifford Whitaker, son of John Carroll Whitaker, C '49, on September 3, 1959. ENGAGED . " ' . Edward A . Dow, C '34, and Miss Mary Virginia Burke of Washington, D. C. Matthew ]. Carrano, C '48, and Miss Ann Laudano of New Haven, Co~n. Charles L. Fornara, C '49, and Miss Marie F. Lascaud of New York City. ]ames D. Farley, FS '50, and Miss Mary Kay Trace of Grosse Pointe, Mich. Raymond J. Gengler, Jr., FS '50, and Miss Margaret Anne Tyson of New York City. Dr. David H. Burton, G '51, Ph.D. '53, and Miss Geraldine F. Ferrari of Upper Darby, Pa. Charles I. Griffith, C '51, and Miss Mary Elizabeth De Vol of Wa shington, D. C. Dr. John Gerald Meagher, C '51, and Miss Carol Anne Wormald of Huntington, N.Y. Dr. John H. Ring, Jr., C '51, and Miss Nora Ester Costello of Ch eektowaga, N. Y. John Joseph Cassidy, C '52, L '55, and Miss Sally Hawes of Charleston, W. Va. Anthony ] . Brosco, L '53, and Mi ss Angela Archetto of Cranston, R. I. R obert G. Errigo, B '53, and Miss Mary Ann Young of Sacramento City, Calif. Rob ert F. Sposito , C '53, and Miss Mary Mouton Bayer of Toledo, Ohio. ~ ~ ; . -:.· -' ~ . ,... , ' ~ .. . ' Margaret M. Ziegert, N '53, and Mr. Thomas P . Connor of Philad elphia, Pa. David MacDonald Johnstone, FS '54, and Miss Patricia Alice Ti ernan of Manhasset, N. Y. Herbert S. Wander, C '54, and Miss Ruth Cele Fell of Winnetka, Ill. Edward Joseph Chesky, Jr., G '55, and Miss Ann e S. Kahl of Summit, N. J. Donald P. Hasp el, B '55, and Miss Janet Ann Cook of Washin gton, D. C. Lawrence Edward Kimball, L '55, and Miss Ann Rogers Weaver of Roslyn, L. I., N.Y. Mary Jacqueline R yan, N '55, and lames St. Clair Gardiner, Jr., C '51, L' '55, of Washin gton, D. C. Henry P. Carls, C '56, and Miss Judith J etty of Brockway, P a. Edward N. Farabaugh, C '56, and Miss Joanne Warner of Bound Brook, N. J. Dr. Jo seph D. Ferrara, M '56 and Miss (Dr.) Marriane Schwab of Caracas, Venezuela. Patricia Ethel Grunewald, FS '56, and Mr. Robert Stratton Brady of Providence, R.I. Dr. R. !. Lombardi, D '56, and Miss Brig- GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE " ~ itte Starker of Zittau, Germany. Dr. Rob ert C. Richards, D '56, and Miss Claire Shannon of Bridgeport, Conn. Frank William Cummiskey, G '57, and Miss Mary E. Ward of Fairfield, Conn. Joseph !. Higgins, L '57, and Miss Eileen M. Moran of Allenhurst, N. J. William ! . Hogan, C '57, and Miss Carol Gorman of Corning, N. Y. Ralph B. Kohn en, Jr., C '57, and Miss Nancy Stone of Cincinnati, Ohio. Merrill Thomas McColl, C '57, and Miss Ann A. Hugh es of Kinston, N. C. Daniel H. Morrissey, G '57, and Miss Barbara C. McGrath of Fall River, Mass. Kathleen Anne Riemann, N '57, and Mr. Robert Abell Reber of Baltimore, Md. Peter Godfrey Schmidt, C '57, and Miss Dina Diana Cerruti of New York City. 2nd Lt. lames Carroll Anthony, Jr., B '58, and Miss Judith M. Bream, FS '60, of Harri"sburg, Pa. Lt. ! ohn Watson Bisb ee, Jr., USAF, B '58, and Miss Heidi Feste of Monmouth Beach, N. H. Alfred R. Bozzo, C '58, and Miss Della Salerno of Union City, N. J. Thomas Philip Carolan, C '58, and Miss 25 J eanne Magdalene Rainier, Md. Dahlstedt of Mt. Paul Michael Cnnningham, C '58, and Miss Mary Alice Neumann of Great NecK, N.Y. Barbara Hammes, B '58, and Richard Sha· rood, FS '58, of Washington, D. C. Charles I. Quackenbush Ill, C '58, and Miss Janet Mary Hagen of Ridgewood , N. J. Dr. Robert Emmet Tormey, D '58, and Miss Nancy Ruth Carney of Jamaica Estates, N.Y. Francis Matth ew Adams, L '59, and Mi ss Mary Sandra Richmond of Niagara Falls, N.Y. Peter Andrew Belmont, FS '59, and Miss Denise Ann Read of Greenwich, Conn. S. Thomas Gagliano, L '59, and Mi ss J eanne Marie Labrecque of Newark, N. J. Adrian I. Karp, L '59, and Miss Natali Reichenstein of East Orange, N. J. Dr. Francis ]. Krakowiak, D '59, and Miss Marianne Lu cille VanDuzer of Washing· ton, D. C. Frank M. Lario, Jr., C '59, and Miss Kath· leen D. Cowan of Haddonfield, N. J. John B. Mariano, C '59, and Miss Jacqueline Marsden Smith of Haddonfield, N.J. Lt. Joseph T. Melone, C '59, and Miss Barbara V. Cahill, N '60, of Beverly Hills, Calif. Affred F. Parisi, C '59, and Miss Joan Severino of Bronxville, N. Y. Charfes W. Rnsself, C '59, and Miss Colette La Viale of New York City. Mary Joan Sommer, G '59, and Mr. Bernard Rene Lebel of Paris, France. - Dr. Stephen Z. Turney, M '59, and Miss Carolyn Garney of Bridgewatel , Mass. New & Used Office Furniture Furniture Refinising & Reupholstering ROBERT DOUGAN, JR. reptesenting MARRIAG ES Leo Nnge nt McGnire, C '28, to Mrs. Evelyn Lawrence A. Hymo, L '57, to Miss Karen Carol Platow in Washington, D. C., on December 31. Wiffiam H. Chnrch, FS '40, to Miss Louise H. Twist in St. Paul th e Apostle Church, lrvin glon , N. J ., on November 25. Richard M. Hartsock, FS '47, L '49, to Miss Barbara Joan O'Neil on February 27 in St. Rita's Church, Alexandria, Va. Tomas L. Ryan, C '47, to Miss Gabriela Traeger Souza in Mexico City on November 1, 1957. Cates by Woodford Clay, B '48, to Miss Elizabeth Wild er Gerwin in the Church of St. Mary, Cincinnati, Ohio, on December 30. Dr. Ralph ]. Marifley, Jr., C '48, M '52, to Miss Corrie 1ean Hou ston in th e Shrine of th e Blessed Sacrament, Washington, D. C., on November 28. ]ames V. ]oy, Jr., '50, to Miss Clare Loui se Gochey in St. Bernard's Church, White Plains, N. Y., on January 23. Richard Ferdinand Newman, B '51, to Miss Patricia A. Morris in St. Alban's Episcopal Church, Wes twood , Calif., on December 16. T. F. Gilroy Dafy, C '52, to Miss Grace Stuart Stetson in St. Pius X Church, Fairfield, Conn., on January 16. Neil Walsh, Jr., FS '52, to Mi ss Nancy Sexa uer in St. Ignatius Loyola Church, New York City, December 30. Hen ry Otis Silsbee //1, FS '53, to Miss Barbara Anne P ettis in St. John the EvangeHst Church, Swampsco tt, Mass., on November 14. Richard B. Williams, C '54, to Miss Juli a Ann Saner in Shreveport, La., on June 27. Joseph Andrew Eagen, Jr., '55, to Miss Margu erite Anne Killeen in St. P eter's . Cath edral, Scranton, Pa., on December 26. Jorge Lucas Vafdivieso, B '55 to Senorita Yesmin Galib at St. .Joseph's Church, Villa Caparra, Puerto Rico on J anuary 29, 1960. Howard at The Washington Cathedral, Washington, D. C., on December 19. Arnafdo ]. Ruiz, C '56, to Iiss Zelided Alma on December 26. Lt. Francis P. Keevers, USMC, C '57, to Miss Suzanne Palmieri, FS '59, at the Base Chapel, Bagnoli, Italy, on December 26. John Mannington Casey, FS '58, to Miss Kathleen Grogan in St. Agnes Church, New York City, on December 8. Herb ert ]. Tinsfey, C '58, to Miss J acquelin e Mary Cox in St. Mary's Church, Ma nhasset, L. I., on December 26. ]esmond Dene Balmer, Jr., G '59, to Miss Shirley Ann Victor in the Chapel at Fort Myer, Arlington, Va. Dr. Wifliam Eugene Brann·, M '59, to Miss Marie Winifred Shaughnessy in St. Mark's Church, Cleveland, Ohio, on J anuary 2. Kevin Patrick Charles, L '59, to Miss Emily Margaret Donahu e in the Shrine of th e Most Blessed Sacramen t, Washington, D. C., on F ebruary 27. Dr. Tofle M. Hadity, Jr., D '59, to Miss Gail Annette F errell Dunn in Central Methodist Church, Utica, N. Y., on December 31. Dermot Kevin Nee, C '59, to Miss Virginia Frances Morris in Our Lady of Lourd es Church, Bethesda, Mel., on February 6. Kenneth T. Statmore, L '59, to Miss June Eli nor Mesirow in Temple Sinai, Washington, D. C., on December 27. Dr. Edgar L. Surprenant, M '59, to Miss Mary Ann Ka lis in Holy Trinity Church, Washin gton , D. C., on September 5. Robert Bennett Timmick, B '59, to Miss Denise Sandra Jones in St. Mary's Catholi c Church, Alexandria , Va., on November 28. Carol Ann Von- Spaeth, I '59, to Staff Sgt. Wayne Orville Hamm , USMC, in St.. Andrews. Presbyterian Church in Gibraltar, on December 31. N. FRANK & SON 414- Jrd St., N . W . 01 7-9529 THE SHADE SHOP 2214 M Street, N. W . FE 7-1200 Manufacturers and Distributors of Office Planning & Decorating Office Furniutre for Rent 26 VENETIAN BLINDS WINDOW SHADES Gloss louvered Porch Enclosures Room Darkening Curtains, Draperies GEORGETOWN UN IVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Theodore C. Baiz, LL.B. '30, in Huntington Park, Calif. Stephen R. Baron, Jr., C '28, in New York City, N.Y. Walter J. Bo-ggs, A.B., '98, i n Baltimore, Mel. Chauncey Brown, LL.B., '24, in Washington, D. C. Carl R. Christenson, FS '30, in Las Animas, Colo. Frank J. C/aydon, A.B. '20, in Mount Vernon, N.Y. Vincmt P. Clohisy, LL.B. '16, in Arlington, Va. John W. Connolly, A.B. '04, in Nahant, Mass. Rob ert D. Douglas, Sr., A.B. '96, in Greensboro, N.C. Arthur M. Feenan, A.B. '11, in Salem, Mass. Frank G. Harrison, LL.B. '30, in WilkesBarre, Pa. Marion E. Hyman, L "23, in Washington, D. C. John J. Kearney, LL.B., '26, in Washington, D. C. Daniel H. Pratt, LL.B., '25, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Dr. A. Jam es Rob ertson, SC.D. '33 (Hon.), in Wash ington, D. C. Benjamin F. Rynearson, Sr., LL.B. '21, LL.M. '22, in Silver Spring, Mel. Joseph A. Scolponeti, L. 21, in Boston, Mass. Dr. Daniel F. Shanahan, D.D.S. '24, in Wa terbury, Conn. Orville E. Shirley, LL.B. '14, in Pomona, Ca.lif. Daniel S. Sisson, FS '32, in North Beach, Md. Max Smith, D '24, in Washington, D. C. C1trtis L. Sowers, LL.B. '22, in Silver Spring, Mel. David L. Kmpsaw, C '33, in Montego Bay, Jamaica, B.WJ. Richard M. Lawler, B.S.S. '36, in Rochester, Minn. Matthias Mahomer, Jr., LL.B. '24, in Washi ngton, D. C. Mas01~ J. Man-ghum, LL.B. '11, in Washington, D. C. William McDevitt, LL.B. '94, LL.M. '95, in San Francisco, Calif. William H. Moor e, LL.B. '21, in Washington, D. C. STANDARD ENGINEERING Manufacturers of Sanitary Chemicals DRVC'On , Pl? oovr r.s comPRilV Soaps & Detergents New Address: N ew Phone: 1522- 14th Street, N. W. AD 4-3262 LEO McCORMICK-College '30 COMPANY Engineers - Contractors Paper Products JANITOR SUPPLIES ASSOCIATE POOR, BOWEN, BARTLETT & KENNEDY, INC. • GENERAL INSURANCE Policy Analysis Engineering Surveys Appraisals WASHINGTON, D. C. LExington 9·6004 - Baltimore, Md. EXecutive 3-2460- Washington, D. C. Georgetown Alumni Association 3604 0 Street, N. W. Washington 7 , D. C. Return Postage Guar anteed FAST SERVICE. Around the clock, across the country, the man from Farmers is at your side. Protects your interests. FAIR SETTLEMENT of claims. No red tape. Your agent can inspect damages, arrange for repairs, sign the check. FRIENDLY PEOPLE ready and willing to serve you. Call the Agent from Farmers Insurance Group listed in phone book. AnENTION GEORGETOWN ALUMNI Farmers Insurance Group offers exceptional opportunities in sales, underwriting and administration. Earn while you train. Openings throughout 25 western states. Write Personnel Director, Home Office, 4680 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, Calif. DIRECTORS OF FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP John C. Tyler Co-Chairman of the Board Thomas E. Leavey Co-Chairman of the Board Georgetown '23 LLB, '50 LLD James M. Smith President, Farmers Underwriting Ass'n. Call Farmers Insurance Group George S. Eccles James W. Hughes Georgetown '25 LLB Morgan Doyle Georgetown '25 LLM E. A. Heafey Georgetown '23 ll~ Clair Peck, Jr. • A. J. Eyraud